Bayer shares gain on prospect of second activist pushing for change
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[January 11, 2023]
By Ludwig Burger and Patricia Weiss
FRANKFURT (Reuters) -Bayer is facing demands from activist investor
Bluebell Capital Partners to break up, a person familiar with the matter
told Reuters, pushing shares in the diversified health and agriculture
group to a five-week high.
The source said Bluebell had invested in Bayer a few months ago and is
pushing for a sale of the company's consumer health unit and, at a later
stage, for a separation of Bayer's pharmaceuticals and agriculture
businesses.
Bluebell is also seeking to have supervisory board Chairman Norbert
Winkeljohann and Chief Executive Werner Baumann replaced, the person
said.
Bluebell did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The size
of Bluebell's holding was not immediately clear.
On Monday, another activist investment fund, hedge fund veteran Jeffrey
Ubben's Inclusive Capital Partners, said it had also acquired a stake in
Bayer.
The German industrial icon has seen its market value slide in the wake
of its 2018 takeover of Monsanto.
Bayer's stock was up 3% at 1016 GMT, for a sixth consecutive trading
session of gains. Bluebell's investment was first reported by Bloomberg
late on Tuesday.
A Bayer spokesperson said the company was open in general for
constructive dialogue with stakeholders and declined to comment further.
Bluebell, launched three years ago, has a history of challenging the
policies and executives of some of the world's biggest companies,
including GSK, Glencore and Vivendi <VIV.PA >, while owning very small
stakes.
It was instrumental in the ouster of the boss of French food giant
Danone in 2021 and recently has been campaigning for BlackRock CEO Larry
Fink to quit, in part because of the fund giant's environmental, social
and governance (ESG) efforts.
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A bridge is decorated with the logo of a
Bayer AG, a German pharmaceutical and chemical maker in Wuppertal,
Germany August 9, 2019. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay
Bayer CEO Werner Baumann, who shortly after his promotion in 2016
started pursuing the troubled Monsanto deal, was given a new
contract in 2020 and said at the time he would leave the company
when that term expires in 2024.
Markus Manns, a portfolio manager at top-10 Bayer shareholder Union
Investment, said it would be the responsibility of a new chief
executive to review the company structure.
"It's too early for a break-up but the separation of consumer health
would be an obvious way to create additional value," said Manns,
adding that Union Investment was not in contact with Bluebell.
The upswing in Bayer shares this week, fuelled by the prospect of
billions in additional sales from its drug development pipeline, has
done little to change the bigger picture of years of market
underperformance.
The stock has been weighed down by litigation over weedkiller
Roundup and over environmental pollution with chemicals known as
PCBs, which are legacy issues from the takeover of Monsanto for more
than $60 billion in 2018.
Despite strong demand for its farming products, improved prospects
of its pharmaceuticals business and a number of recent courtroom
victories for the German group, the company is valued at 53 billion
euros ($57 billion) on the stock market, well below the price tag
for Monsanto.
($1 = 0.9308 euros)
(Reporting by Ludwig Burger, Patricia Weiss, Tom Sims in Frankfurt,
Elisa Martinuzzi in London, Editing by Rachel More, Mark Potter and
Catherine Evans)
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