DXC Technology acquired Luxoft for $2bn.
DXC Technology, a B2B multinational corporation that specializes in delivering end-to-end, information technology services and digital transformative solutions for large and mid-scale global organizations, acquired Luxoft, an international custom software development company, for $2bn. Pursuant to the agreement, all of the issued and outstanding Luxoft ordinary shares will be acquired for $59.00 per share in cash.
Together, DXC and Luxoft will offer a differentiated customer value proposition for end-to-end digital transformation by combining Luxoft’s digital engineering capabilities with DXC’s expertise in IT modernization and integration. The acquisition will accelerate the digital growth and scale-out strategy outlined by DXC at its Investor Day last fall and will broaden access to key digital talent.
Guggenheim Securities, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Latham & Watkins and Harney Westwood & Riegels advised DXC. Credit Suisse, Conyers Dill & Pearman and White & Case advised Luxoft.
PPF Group announced its intent to acquire Nova Broadcasting, which offers television and news broadcasting services in Bulgaria, in February of 2018. The company was sold by MTG, a digital entertainment company based in Stockholm, for €185m ($210m). The deal was canceled due to its rejection by Bulgarian antitrust regulators.
Citigroup advised Nova and MTG. Allen & Overy advised MTG.
The European Union’s competition watchdog will decide by February 18 whether to approve a merger of the rail operations of Siemens, a German conglomerate company, and Alstom, a French multinational company operating worldwide in rail transport markets. The €15bn ($17bn) merger was announced in September 2017.
The concerns over how the merger would affect competition center around the supply of very high-speed rolling stock for trains such as the Eurostar which links Britain, France, Belgium and the Netherlands.
Alstom was advised by Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, JP Morgan and Rothschild & Co, while Siemens was advised by Goldman Sachs, Latham & Watkins and Sullivan & Cromwell.
Sanofi to pay Regeneron $580m in revision of their partnership deal.
Sanofi, a French multinational pharmaceutical company, and Regeneron, a biotechnology company, revised their collaboration deal to develop two clinical-stage bispecific antibodies. Sanofi will pay Regeneron $462m representing the balance of payments due under their original deal and up to $120m in other development costs.
Sanofi shares fell 1.1% in response to the news.
Banco Carige tries to salvage its rescue plan.
The administrators of Banco Carige, an Italian bank based in Genoa, will meet with the heads of the fund that has propped up the troubled lender as the parties look to resolve an impasse standing in the way of the bank’s rescue. The bank's finances were severely hit when it failed to gain shareholder approval for an up to €400m ($455m) new share issue.
Carige’s failure to approve the capital increase triggered a stepping up of the coupon to 16% from 13%. That represents €51m ($58m) in annual interest, further stretching the loss-making bank’s finances.
Ophir Energy to take $300m impairment.
Ophir Energy, an oil and gas exploration and production company based in London, expects to report a non-cash write-down of $300m in its full-year results after being denied the extension of a block license which houses a liquid natural gas project in Equatorial Guinea. The company, which is in talks to be acquired by Medco Energi Internasional, holds an 80% interest in the block which contains the Fortuna gas discovery.
Ophir said that Medco knew it was possible that it would not get the license extension for the block and that deal talks with the Indonesian company were continuing.
Chanel strengthened its position in the watchmaking market.
Chanel, a high fashion house that specializes in women's haute couture and ready-to-wear clothes, luxury goods, and fashion accessories, looks to strengthen its position in luxury watchmaking with recent investments including in small Swiss parts maker Kenissi. Chanel holds a 20% stake in the company, which it acquired in 2017 for $20m.
“The size of our investment has not changed and remains at 20%,” Chanel said, adding it was publicizing its holding ahead of the Baselworld trade fair in March.