Exclusive: Bayer to win EU approval for $62.5 billion
Monsanto deal - sources
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[February 28, 2018]
By Foo Yun Chee
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - German drug and crop
chemicals maker Bayer <BAYGn.DE> is set to win conditional European
Union antitrust approval for its $62.5 billion bid for world No. 1 seed
company Monsanto <MON.N>, two people familiar with the matter said on
Wednesday.
The takeover, one of a trio of major deals in the agribusiness sector in
recent years, would create a company with a share of more than a quarter
of the world's seed and pesticides market.
Shifting weather patterns, competition in grain exports and a souring
global farm economy have spurred consolidation among the major players,
triggering protests from environmental and farming groups worried about
their market power.
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Bayer has already pledged to sell certain seed and herbicide assets for
5.9 billion euros ($7.2 billion) to BASF <BASFn.DE> to address EU
regulatory concerns.
The company will also give BASF a license to its digital farming data,
and it appears BASF will have exclusive access as Bayer has not offered
a legal obligation to license to other rivals, a person with knowledge
of the matter has told Reuters.
Earlier on Wednesday, Bayer said additional antitrust concessions would
include the sale of its vegetable seeds business, confirming a Reuters
report.
The European Commission, which is expected to issue a decision on the
deal ahead of its April 5 deadline, declined to comment.
Bayer also declined to comment on the sources' comments, saying it
continued a constructive dialogue with the EU competition watchdog. It
added the regulatory process in Europe was further advanced than in the
United States where the deal also requires clearance.
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The logo of Bayer AG February 24, 2014. REUTERS/Ina Fassbender/File
Photo
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French seeds producer Vilmorin said it would consider taking over some vegetable
seed activities put up for sale by Bayer.
"It will depend on the breakdown that will be made. If there are clever and
targeted things to do, why not, but if it's all-encompassing then clearly we
don't have the profile for it to be accepted by the authorities," Vilmorin Chief
Executive Daniel Jacquemond told reporters after unveiling first-half results.
The Bayer-Monsanto tie-up has sparked criticism from environmentalists and some
farming groups concerned about its market power and first mover advantage in
digital farming data.
Some who met on Tuesday with European Competition Commissioner Margrethe
Vestager, who has received more than 50,000 petition emails and more than 5,000
letters opposed to the deal, were not reassured.
"Approving this merger would create the world's biggest agribusiness company,
potentially crushing competitors and establishing an unprecedented monopoly on
lucrative farming data," said Adrian Bebb at environmental lobbying group
Friends of the Earth Europe.
"Public opinion is against the merger, and farmers and consumers would have
every right to be outraged by the Commission giving it the green light."
(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; Additional reporting by Ludwig Burger in Frankfurt
and Sybille de La Hamaide in Paris; Editing by Alexander Smith and Mark Potter)
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