Takeda shareholders approve $59bn Shire takeover.
Takeda Pharmaceutical shareholders approved its $59bn takeover of Shire, a Jersey-registered, Irish-headquartered global specialty biopharmaceutical company, creating a global powerhouse with a strong drugs pipeline. Takeda will be joining the ranks of the world’s top 10 drug makers and gaining expertise in rare diseases through the deal, the biggest overseas acquisition by a Japanese company.
The company’s high debt levels were a top concern for shareholders who gathered at an extraordinary meeting in Osaka, although almost 90% of them voted to approve the deal as expected. Takeda shares have fallen around 25% since the drug maker revealed its interest in the acquisition. They closed up 1% at JPY4,240 ($39) on Wednesday.
On the deal, Takeda was advised by Evercore, JP Morgan, Nomura, Latham & Watkins, Linklaters, Nishimura & Asahi, Ogier and Sullivan & Cromwell. Shire was advised by Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Ashurst, Davis Polk, Mourant Ozannes, Nagashima Ohno & Tsunematsu and Slaughter & May.
Faroe Petroleum and Equinor strike asset swap deal.
Faroe Petroleum, an independent oil and gas company focusing principally on exploration, appraisal and production opportunities in Norway and the UK, and Equinor, a Norwegian multinational energy company, have struck a deal to swap Norwegian oil and gas assets. The deal could raise the price that
hostile bidder DNO has to pay to secure the takeover of Faroe.
While Faroe Petroleum’s Chief Executive Graham Stewart said the deal had been in the works before Norway’s DNO launched its £608m ($778m) offer last month and was not intended to stop the bid, analysts said it would make Faroe a more attractive takeover target. Faroe rejected DNO’s 152 pence ($1.95) per share bid on Nov. 26, saying it significantly undervalued the Aberdeen-based firm.
Sberbank receives proposals to sell its stake in Agrokor.
Russia’s Sberbank, a key stakeholder in Croatian food producer and retailer Agrokor, received proposals to sell its share in the firm which is emerging from a debt crisis, an aide to Sberbank’s CEO said. Agrokor, the largest firm in the Balkans with over 50k staff, was put under state-run administration last year, crippled by debts built up during an ambitious expansion drive.
Maxim Poletayev, who is overseeing Agrokor’s restructuring, said that Sberbank has already started to get proposals to buy out the bank’s stake from different kinds of distressed funds spanning from the United States and Canada to the UK. Poletayev said that Sberbank is in talks with both western and eastern funds and banks, including from China and Arab countries, which may take part in the refinancing process.
Thyssenkrupp in a rush to make a decision regarding JV with Tata Steel.
Thyssenkrupp, a German multinational conglomerate with a focus on industrial engineering and steel production, needs to quickly settle who will lead a planned European joint venture with Tata Steel, an Indian multinational steel-making company, a labour leader said on Wednesday. Thyssenkrupp’s workers are urging the company to deliver on a promise that a decision on the leadership of the joint venture would be made before Christmas.
The joint venture, called Thyssenkrupp Tata Steel, will have a two-tier leadership structure: a management board and a supervisory board, each with six members, on which both companies will be equally represented. Former Siemens executive Andreas Goss, who has been heading Thyssenkrupp Steel Europe since 2014, is seen as one of the top candidates to lead the combined entity.
With regards to forming the joint venture, Thyssenkrupp was advised by Rothschild and Tata Steel was advised by Ernst & Young.
UK watchdogs will probe PayPal’s iZette.
Britain’s competition watchdogs said that Paypal Holdings Inc’s $2.2bn takeover of Swedish financial technology startup iZettle would be referred for an in-depth review. The Competition and Markets Authority said that Paypal had refused to offer proposals to address its concerns on how the deal, Paypal's biggest ever, could hurt competition and could lead to higher prices for customers, or worse quality of service.
The deadline for CMA’s final decision on the matter is May 21, 2019.
Evercore, Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP and Roschier advised PayPal. JP Morgan and Gernandt & Danielsson advised iZettle.