SABMiller Pauses Integration Work With Anheuser-Busch InBev -- 3rd Update
July 27 2016 - 4:03PM
Dow Jones News
By Saabira Chaudhuri
LONDON -- SABMiller PLC has paused its integration work with
Anheuser-Busch InBev NV, according to a person familiar with the
matter, as the London-based brewer's board consults with
shareholders over whether the revised offer AB InBev broached on
Tuesday is acceptable.
The pause in integration doesn't necessarily signal that the
SABMiller board will oppose the new offer. Still, news of the halt
worried investors, sending AB InBev's American depositary receipts
down 3.7% in New York.
In the spring, SABMiller had begun working with AB InBev on
integrating finance, technology, procurement and certain
supply-chain functions, the person said. The company on Tuesday
decided to halt this work after AB InBev surprised SABMiller by
revising its offer without consulting with the No. 2 brewer on the
new terms, and also said the revised offer was final.
SABMiller's board is now consulting with its largest
shareholders to assess whether they like the new offer and plans to
meet to consider the revised bid before making a final
recommendation on whether shareholders should accept the latest
deal. The board will consider a range of factors, including how the
pound's weakness has eroded the all-cash portion of the deal's
premium and what SABMiller's valuation would be if the bid from the
world's largest brewer falls through, the person familiar with the
matter said.
A recommendation by SABMiller's board could come within days,
the person said.
"Stopping work on the integration is not the same as rejecting
the deal, although it clearly raises that possibility," said RBC
analyst James Edwardes Jones, adding that the latest development
"has introduced a significant level of uncertainty."
Belgian-based AB InBev boosted its cash offer to GBP45 ($59.12)
a share from GBP44 a share to appease SABMiller shareholders, who
had watched the value of the offer fall along with sterling. The
pound sank after the June 23 vote by Britain to leave the European
Union.
That sterling decline has deflated the value of AB InBev's
cash-only offer, intended for most shareholders, compared with a
separate cash-and-share offer aimed at SABMiller's two biggest
shareholders, U.S. cigarette maker Altria Group Inc. and Colombia's
Santo Domingo family. Altria said Wednesday that it expected to get
another $500 million from its 27% stake in SABMiller as a result of
the revised offer.
Aberdeen Asset Management, a large SABMiller shareholder, on
Tuesday characterized AB InBev's revised offer as "unacceptable"
following the drop in the pound, saying the deal unfairly favors
investors who can opt for the cash and stock offer.
But other SABMiller shareholders, such as New York-based
investment-management firm Twin Capital Management LLC, said they
want to the deal to go through. "I think people are being too
shortsighted," said Twin Capital Chief Executive David Simon in an
interview on Wednesday. Mr. Simon, who said his firm owns more than
a million shares of SABMiller, characterized AB InBev's offer as
"fair."
Another large SABMiller shareholder, South Africa's Public
InvestmentCorp. -- Africa's largest pension-fund manager -- in an
emailed statement said it is "still in discussions with SABMiller
on the offer price." It declined to make its view public at this
point.
Write to Saabira Chaudhuri at saabira.chaudhuri@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 27, 2016 15:48 ET (19:48 GMT)
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