By Pamela Barbaglia and Alexander Hübner
(Reuters)
- U.S. agrochemicals firm Monsanto (MON.N) has not given up on a
proposed takeover of Swiss rival Syngenta (SYNN.VX), a source close to
Monsanto said on Friday after its $45 billion offer was rejected.
It
is still working on the deal and could decide to increase its initial
bid which valued the firm at 449 Swiss francs a share, a 36 percent
premium to Thursday's closing price.
A deal would give Monsanto, which dominates the market for seeds and genetically-modified crops, access to lucrative crop protection chemicals and create an industry behemoth with combined sales of more than $31 billion.
Syngenta
rebuffed the cash-and-shares offer, saying it undervalued its prospects
and did not fully take into account regulatory risks.
But the Swiss firm does not consider the deal dead, according to another source, who is familiar with Syngenta.Monsanto, which earlier confirmed it had made an offer, declined to comment on whether it would improve the bid.
A spokesman for Syngenta declined to comment.
Meanwhile, major investors in Syngenta told Reuters that they were confident a deal with Monsanto would come off if the U.S. firm upped its initial $45 billion bid by at least 10 percent.
"Monsanto is likely to come back relatively soon, and not with a modest price," said a third source, a banker who has worked with the U.S. company in the past.
Monsanto may need to pay a premium of up to 40 percent to Syngenta's shareholders to make the deal attractive, the banker said.
To
ease antitrust concerns, it may also team up with an industry partner
to acquire Syngenta's U.S. seeds business, as the two groups are already
seen as market leaders in the American seeds industry, according to the
first source close to Monsanto.
ANTITRUST SCRUTINY
Monsanto
foresees strong benefits from a takeover of Syngenta, which makes heavy
research and development (R&D) investments in crop technology to
increase the average productivity of crops such as corn, soybeans, sugar
cane and cereals.
The
U.S. firm, meanwhile, is focused on conventional and biotech seeds and
last year raised its R&D spending to $1.7 billion from $1.5 billion
in 2013.
"There
is a clear strategic logic to a deal," an industry source said.
"Syngenta is the only available target in crop protection. It's no
wonder Monsanto continues to circle the company."
Other
large providers of crop chemicals such as BASF (BASFn.DE), Bayer
(BAYGn.DE) and Dupont Pioneer are not seen as sellers and have
diversified their operations in areas which are less relevant for
Monsanto, the banker said.
However,
Monsanto could seek to strike an alliance with the likes of Bayer and
BASF and place a joint bid in an effort to ease "draconian antitrust
scrutiny," the banker added.
"The production of seeds is a concentrated industry," said Andre Barlow, an antitrust expert at Doyle, Barlow and Mazard PLLC.
"Both
(companies) overlap in crop protection and seeds and there is a lot of
R&D in this space, which would raise additional concerns," he said.
(Reporting by Pamela Barbaglia in London and Alexander Huebner in
Frankfurt; Additional reporting by Arno Schuetze, Diana Bartz, Greg
Roumeliotis, Mike Stone, Sybille de La Hamaide, Avik Das; Editing by
Keith Weir and Pravin Char)
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