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Daily Review is our daily roundup of M&A news. Announcements, rumors, insights, and data before your morning coffee. Subscribe and never miss a beat with MergerLinks.
22 November 2018

Volkswagen and Broadcom reach patent lawsuit agreement.

Daily Review

Global M&A

EMEA

Epiris acquired Diamorph from Serendipity Ixora and Latour for SEK1.5bn ($166m). (Financial Sponsors) 

XIO looks to sell Lumenis to CVC for $1bn. (FS)

Schibsted wants to expand through mergers.

Generali to pursue aggressive growth plans.

Volkswagen and Broadcom reach patent lawsuit agreement.

 

AMERICAS

Prime Communications acquired the Spring Mobile business of GameStop for $700m.

Arconic deal to end in mid-December. (FS)

Walgreens and Humana plan to acquire stakes in each other.
 

APAC

Apax Partners made a NZ$2.5bn ($1.7bn) takeover offer to Trade Me. (FS)

HNA sold a 40% stake in Urumqi Air to local government.

Singapore investigates Noble Group.
 
Shell sold a stake in Greater Sunrise gas fields to East Timor for $300m.

CK Group abandons APA Group deal.

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EMEA

 
Epiris acquired Diamorph from Serendipity Ixora and Latour for SEK1.5bn ($166m). (FS)

Epiris acquired Diamorph, a supplier of advanced material solutions for demanding and safety-critical applications, from Serendipity Ixora, Swedish financial planner, and Latour, industrial holdings firm. Financial terms were not disclosed however, the deal value is rumored to be around SEK1.5bn ($166m). 

Charles Elkington, Partner at Epiris, said: “Diamorph is a high-quality business: it has leadership positions in stable markets with strong underlying demand drivers. Beyond this solid base we see an opportunity to achieve a step change in terms of growth by bringing greater focus and ambition to the development of Diamorph’s undoubted strengths in research and development and application engineering.”

Epiris was advised by Roland Berger, PricewaterhouseCoopers and Ropes & Gray.
 
XIO looks to sell Lumenis to CVC for $1bn. (FS)

Lumenis is a veteran Israeli medical device company, which develops, manufactures and markets equipment based on light energy, including lasers, for surgical, ophthalmology and aesthetic applications. The company has annual revenue of about $400m. The $1bn deal, which XIO and CVC are close to reaching, is expected to be announced in the next few weeks. XIO acquired Lumenis in 2015 for $510m.
 
Schibsted wants to expand through mergers.

The online classified advertising business of Norwegian media group Schibsted seeks to expand via mergers and acquisitions on three continents, the company’s chief executive told Reuters. A split, announced in September, will see Schibsted’s MPI division, which includes brands such as France’s Leboncoin, Brazil’s OLX and Britain’s Shpock listed separately next year.

“MPI will have very good organic growth, but we also now have a ‘license to expand’, which means that we are well positioned to take part in further consolidation, and we will consider acquisitions,” Schibsted Chief Executive Rolv Erik Ryssdal told Reuters in an interview. “MPI will be a very big company in itself. It will be the biggest purely classifieds company in Europe, so I think the company is very well positioned itself to play an active role in the consolidation.”
 
Generali to pursue aggressive growth plans.

Generali CEO Philippe Donnet designated around €4bn ($4.5bn) for growth as he plans to outpace his European rivals with an aggressive new plan. He promised to increase earnings of the Italian insurer by 6% to 8% a year in the next three years, higher than previous Generali growth and targets set by other insurers.

“We’ll consider any kind of insurance company that would help us to strengthen our market position in European countries and any insurance company that would give us a top three position in a new market,” said Mr. Donnet to the Financial Times.

Most of the expected growth will come from Generali’s operating businesses, where Mr. Donnet plans to cut €200m ($228m) of costs. He is also expecting to cut the company’s interest expense by reducing its debt.
 
Volkswagen and Broadcom reach patent lawsuit agreement.

According to Reuters, Volkswagen struck a deal with US semiconductor maker Broadcom, ending a billion-dollar patent lawsuit that pitted the carmaker against its supplier. The companies signed an out-of-court settlement. Friday’s court hearing has been canceled.

Der Spiegel first reported in early November that California-based Broadcom had made a patent claim for more than $1bn against Volkswagen and threatened to seek a judicial ban on the production of several car models.
 
 

AMERICAS

 
Prime Communications acquired the Spring Mobile business of GameStop for $700m.

Prime Communications, a Texas-based wireless retailer, acquired Spring Mobile, a Utah-based retailer of AT&T wireless phones, previously owned by GameStop, the world’s largest video game and gaming console retailer, for $700m, excluding transaction fees and subject to customary working capital and indebtedness adjustments.

"This transaction enables GameStop to enhance our performance with an increased focus on the video game industry and the rapidly-growing collectibles space. “These are areas where we have considerable experience and where we are well positioned to capitalize on our competitive position," said Dan DeMatteo, executive chairman of GameStop's board of directors. "Our board continues to review strategic and financial alternatives to enhance shareholder value and we look forward to providing an update on the process at the appropriate time."

Perella Weinberg Partners and Pepper Hamilton advised GameStop. JP Morgan, SunTrust Robinson Humphrey and Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher advised Prime Communications.
 
Arconic deal to end in mid-December. (FS)

Arconic, a US-based aluminum products maker, could announce a leveraged buyout this December. The company has been mulling over offers for the past couple of months and is close to making its decision. Among the bidders for Arconic are CPPIB, Onex, Carlyle Group, Blackstone and Apollo Global Management, which made an $11bn offer to Arconic in October.

If a deal does come to fruition, it could be the largest leveraged buyout since the big buyout boom that preceded the 2008 financial crisis.
 
Walgreens and Humana plan to acquire stakes in each other.

Drugstore owner Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc and health insurer Humana Inc are in preliminary discussions to take equity stakes in each other, the Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday. This news comes amid widespread consolidation in the healthcare industry, with pharmacy benefits manager CVS Health Corp set to close its $69bn purchase of health insurer Aetna after the Thanksgiving holiday.

Walgreens shares dropped 2.6% in response to the news, while those of Humana were marginally lower.
 
 

APAC

 
Apax Partners made a NZ$2.5bn ($1.7bn) takeover offer to Trade Me. (FS)

Apax Partners made NZ$2.5bn ($1.7bn) takeover offer to Trade Me, the operator of the largest Internet auction website operating in New Zealand. The NZ$6.40 ($4.37) a share offer represents a 25% premium on its closing price on Nov 20.
 
Apax Partners is offering to buy the entire business for a cash payment, but the offer was subject to a number of conditions, including the completion of due diligence, Trade Me said. Trade Me shares leaped 20% in response to the news. 
 
Goldman Sachs advised Trade Me. UBS advised Apax Partners.
 
HNA sold a 40% stake in Urumqi Air to local government.

Hainan Airlines Holding, the aviation unit of Chinese conglomerate HNA Group, sold a 40% stake in Urumqi Air to the government of Urumqi. Financial terms were not disclosed. After the transaction, the government or its designated subsidiaries will hold 70% of Urumqi Air’s shares, while HNA will hold 30%. 

Hainan Airlines said the transaction would be of long-term benefit to the local carrier based in Urumqi, the capital of the Xinjiang autonomous region.
 
Singapore investigates Noble Group.

According to a Reuters report, Singapore authorities are investigating Noble Group Ltd for suspected false and misleading statements, just days before the Singapore-listed company was to complete its $3.5bn debt restructuring deal to prevent its collapse. The company, whose shares were suspended from trading from Monday due to the restructuring, is seeking to transform into an Asia-focused coal-trading business and list the overhauled business.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore and the city-state’s central bank will investigate Noble for suspected violations of securities and company laws, and potential non-compliance with accounting standards by one of Noble’s subsidiaries.

Noble said it intends to co-operate fully with the authorities in their investigation.
 
Shell sold a stake in Greater Sunrise gas fields to East Timor for $300m.

East Timor agreed to buy Royal Dutch Shell’s stake in the Greater Sunrise natural gas fields off the northern coast of Australia for $300m, the government and Shell Australia said on Wednesday. The acquisition of Shell’s 26.56% stake in the project will allow the tiny nation to push for development of the field.

“Although we formed different views about the optimal development scenario, we understand the priorities of the Timor-Leste Government and wish it well in pursuing its aspirations to develop this important resource for the nation", executive Zoe Yujnovich of Shell Australia said in the statement. “This sale aligns with our global strategy to reshape Shell into a simpler and more resilient company”.
 
CK Group abandons APA Group deal.

CK Group has formally announced its decision to walk away from the A$13bn ($9.5bn) takeover of APA Group, Australia’s biggest gas-pipeline operator. The deal has been vetoed by the Australian government on national-security grounds.

Australia’s Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, who is responsible for the decision, said: “I have formed this view on the basis that it would result in a single foreign company group having sole ownership and control over Australia’s most significant gas transmission business”.

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