Hosking Partners called for investigation of £2.2m Flybe acquisition. (FS)
Hosking Partners, Flybe’s largest shareholder with an 18.72% holding, urged the airline to remove Chairman Simon Laffin and investigate its cut-price sale to a consortium consisting of Virgin Atlantic, Stobart Group and Cyrus Capital. Earlier this month, Flybe, a British airline, agreed to be bought for £2.2m ($2.8m), a 94% discount to the stock’s closing price a day before the sale announcement.
Laffin, who previously worked in senior positions at Safeway, Aegis Group, Mitchells & Butlers and Northern Rock, has chaired Flybe for more than five years.
Flybe Group was advised by Evercore and Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner. Stobart Group was advised by Barclays and Hill Dickinson. Cyrus Capital was advised by Morgan Lewis & Bockius. Virgin Atlantic was advised by Rothschild, Herbert Smith and FTI Consulting.
CMA CGM, a French container transportation and shipping company, made a $1.7bn takeover bid for CEVA Logistics, a global logistics supply chain company in both freight management and contract logistics. CMA CGM currently holds 50.6% of CEVA, made up of around 33% of CEVA’s shares, plus derivatives.
Xavier Urbain, CEO of CEVA, said: "I am proud to be putting the whole organization on track to accelerate our transformation and turnaround action plan in the next three years and beyond. This can be achieved by a combination of our commercial and sales focus, cross-selling with CMA CGM customers, our own productivity actions, the integration of CMA CGM Logistics within CEVA and sharing resources with CMA CGM in the field of non-strategic procurement and administrative functions."
CMA CGM was advised by BNP, Bank Vontobel, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, Messier Maris & Associes and Societe Generale.
Bridgepoint acquired Miya from Arison Investments for $260m. (FS)
Bridgepoint acquired water technology firm Miya from Arison Investments, the investment arm of US-Israeli billionaire Shari Arison, for $260m.
Miya was founded by Arison in 2008 to provide water technology solutions, focusing on increasing efficiency in urban water systems. Arison has been gradually selling off assets in Israel. Last year she sold control of construction group Shikun & Binui to businessman Naty Saidoff for $299m.
Indonesian oil and gas group Medco got an extension to Jan. 31 to make a firm takeover offer for Ophir Energy, an oil and gas exploration and production company based in London, or walk away. The companies have recently been negotiating a 55 pence per share offer. Earlier this month, Ophir rejected Medco’s $437m potential buyout offer based on 48.5 pence per share saying it undervalued the company and that Medco had initially mooted 58 pence per share.
Ophir Energy is being advised by Investec, Morgan Stanley and Brunswick Group. PT Medco is being advised by Standard Chartered Bank and Tulchan Communications.
Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank’s chairman and CEO to take top positions in new bank.
Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank’s chairman and chief executive will fill the top positions within the company to be created after the merger with Union National Bank and Al Hilal Bank. ADCB is the largest bank within the three-way tie-up, which could form a bank with around $113bn in assets and become the third-largest lender in the United Arab Emirates after First Abu Dhabi Bank and Emirates NBD.
Eissa Mohamed al Suwaidi, chairman of ADCB, will take the same post at the new bank, with Ala’a Eraiqat, ADCB’s chief executive, assuming the role of CEO.
AB InBev to raise $5-10bn by selling a stake in its Asian business. (FS)
According to a Financial Times report, AB InBev, a multinational drink and brewing holdings company, is looking to raise $5-10bn by selling a stake in its Asian business in order to cut the company’s debt. AB InBev's current debt stands at $109bn, a result of the company’s tactic of doing debt-fuelled acquisitions followed by ruthless cost-cutting to pay for the next takeover. Uncertainty surrounding the firm’s financial situation led to a stock price decline of about 40% last year.
AB InBev’s biggest shareholders— tobacco group Altria, Colombia’s Santo Domingo family, the three Brazilian founders of 3G Capital, a Brazilian-American multibillion-dollar investment firm, and a group of Belgian families remain supportive to the company’s debt-cutting plans.
Alternatively to divesting some of its assets, AB InBev could simply wait for a few years to generate cash to reduce debt: free cash flow is forecast to be $9.2bn for 2018, and $11.8bn in 2019, according to Bloomberg.
Finnish government acquired additional stakes in Nokia and Konecranes.
The Finnish government’s investment arm Soliudium raised its stakes in both telecom equipment maker Nokia and in crane maker Konecranes. Solidium said it had acquired shares in Nokia for €95m ($108m), increasing its holding to 3.7% from 3.3% and shares in Konecranes for €29m, increasing its holding to 7.4% from 6.2% in the latter half of 2018.
In March 2018, Solidium spent about €844m ($962m) to build its earlier 3.3% stake in Nokia to strengthen national influence over the telecom network gear maker.
Lufthansa held talks about Alitalia acquisition.
German airlines group Lufthansa said it held talks regarding an acquisition of a majority stake in ailing Italian carrier Alitalia and would be interested in a full takeover in the long run. Alitalia, which was put under special administration in 2017, would remain operationally independent within the Lufthansa group, with its own brand.
Lufthansa is only prepared to buy in if Alitalia first undergoes a major round of job cuts under state administration and if it gets full control without co-ownership by the Italian government.
German conservatives call to protect European companies.
German conservative Manfred Weber, leader of the European People’s Party in the European Parliament, said that the 2016 $5bn purchase of German robotics maker Kuka by China’s Midea showed that it was necessary to protect European firms.
The comments come after Germany agreed on new rules in December to lower the threshold for screening and even block purchases of stakes in German firms by non-Europeans, in a move to fend off unwanted takeovers by Chinese investors in strategic areas.
David Crane to exercise voting rights for VTB's stake in EN+.
David Crane, former chief executive of US power company NRG Energy, will exercise the voting rights for Russian bank VTB’s stake in EN+, a leading vertically integrated aluminum and power producer, as part of the agreement for the United States to waive sanctions against the company previously controlled by Oleg Deripaska.
Russian tycoon Deripaska has agreed to reduce his stake in London-listed EN+ to 44.95% from 70% and assign any voting rights above 35% to a voting trust formed by US independent trustees D. J. Baker, David Crane, Arthur Dodge and Jersey-based Ogier Global Nominee.