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Germany's Metro Says €5.8bn Bid 'Substantially Undervalues' Company

By Steve Wynne-Jones
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Germany's Metro Says €5.8bn Bid 'Substantially Undervalues' Company

Metro AG has said that an unsolicited offer by two prominent investors to take over the German wholesaler 'substantially undervalues' it and advised shareholders on Sunday to hold off on taking action until management comments further.

On Friday, EP Global Commerce, an acquisition vehicle owned by the Czech and Slovak investors, made the takeover offer, which valued the company at €5.8 billion.

'Substantially Undervalued'

The retailer, noting that the offer price was only 3% above the closing share price on Friday, said the bid "substantially undervalues the company and does not reflect its value creation plan".

Metro said management was continuing to transform the company. It said it would comment further once the full offer document was available and that shareholders should take no action in the meanwhile.

EP Global Commerce, which already held a stake of nearly 11% in Metro, said on Friday that its offer price of 16 euros for each ordinary share and 13.80 euros for each preferred share represented a 34.5% premium to when EP Global Commerce made its initial investment in August.

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The firm, co-owned by Czech investor Daniel Kretinsky and Slovak partner Patrik Tkac, said the offer was "a compelling value and a unique opportunity" for shareholders given the difficult market and challenges facing Metro.

Some shareholders are already supporting the bid by the Czech-Slovak duo.

Interested Parties

Investment firm Haniel has agreed to sell its 15.2% stake, EP Global Commerce said on Friday. And it also said it would exercise a call option for a stake of 5.4% held by an affiliate of Ceconomy.

EP Global Commerce's offer raises the question about the status of Metro's plans to sell Real, valued at about €1 billion, to a consortium lead by the real-estate investor Redos.

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EP Global Commerce has criticized the deal with Redos because the price was too low, Reuters reported last month. But a spokesman for Metro on Sunday said its plans for the deal remained intact.

Streamlining

Once a sprawling retail conglomerate, Metro has in recent years been restructuring to focus on its core cash-and-carry business, selling off the Kaufhof department stores and then splitting from consumer electronics group Ceconomy.

It still operates in 26 countries with 771 stores and 150,000 employees, but it is trying to offload its loss-making Real hypermarkets chain, as well as its operations in China.

The Czech and Slovak bidders signalled that further changes were needed at Metro, though they said they would not close stores in Germany and its core markets, or cut jobs substantially.

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"Metro needs to regain the capability to swiftly react," they said, adding that otherwise, it "would be exposed to significant risks due to stagnant or declining results."

News by Reuters, edited by ESM. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: European Supermarket Magazine.

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