ChemChina clinches landmark
$43 billion takeover of Syngenta
Send a link to a friend
[May 05, 2017]
By Michael Shields
ZURICH
(Reuters) - ChemChina [CNCC.UL] has won more than enough support from
Syngenta shareholders to clinch its $43 billion takeover of the Swiss
pesticides and seeds group, the two companies said on Friday.
The deal, announced in February 2016, was prompted by China's desire to
use Syngenta's portfolio of top-tier chemicals and patent-protected
seeds to improve domestic agricultural output. It is China's biggest
foreign takeover to date.
It is one of several deals that are remaking the international market
for agricultural chemicals, seeds and fertilisers.
The other deals in the sector are a $130 billion proposed merger of Dow
Chemical and DuPont, and Bayer's plan to merge with Monsanto.
The trend toward market consolidation has triggered fears among farmers
that the pipeline for new herbicides and pesticides might slow.
Regulators have required some divestments as a condition for approving
the Syngenta deal.
Based on preliminary numbers, around 80.7 percent of Syngenta shares
have been tendered, above the minimum threshold of 67 percent support,
the partners said in a joint statement.
The agreed offer is for $465 per share. Syngenta shares closed on
Thursday at 459 Swiss francs ($464.5), and rose 0.4 percent in early
trade on Friday to 461.20 francs.
The transaction is set to close on May 18 after the start of an
additional acceptance period for shareholders and payment of a special
5-franc dividend to holders of Swiss-listed shares on May 16. Holders of
U.S.-listed depositor receipts will get the special dividend in July.
Syngenta shares will be delisted from the Swiss bourse and its
depository receipts from the New York Stock Exchange.
Chief Executive Erik Fyrwald played down the transition from publicly
listed group to becoming part of a Chinese state enterprise, stressing
that Syngenta would remain a Swiss-based global company while under
Chinese ownership.
[to top of second column] |
Agrochemicals maker
Syngenta's logo is pictured during the annual news conference in
Zurich February 6, 2009. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann/File Photo
"It is
very important to understand that this is a financial transaction," he told
broadcaster CNBC in an interview.
He saw two major changes: giving Syngenta a long-term shareholder to accompany
it during the 12 years it typically takes to discover and launch new products,
and helping to overhaul Chinese agriculture, which he called very much behind
the global standard.
He said he expected the acceptance rate to easily surpass 90 percent, with a
squeeze-out of remaining shareholders to follow if needed in June.
Funding for the acquisition was clear and irrevocable, while refinancing the
company after the transaction closed was still being discussed.
"I am very confident we are going to have a strong balance sheet as agreed," he
said, with an investment-grade rating that would let it pursue market share
growth, investments, capital spending and acquisitions.
Syngenta sells its products in more than 90 countries under such brand names as
Acuron, Axial, Beacon and Callisto. It sells seeds such as cereals, corn, rice,
soybeans and vegetables.
(Reporting by Michael Shields; Editing by Randy Fabi/Keith Weir)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|