Ya-who blinked?
Yahoo chief Jerry Yang has fended off Carl Icahn’s pending proxy fight, but the billionaire activist investor isn’t going away. In the aftermath of a deal struck between the two to end Icahn’s pending proxy fight, eight Yahoo board members are set to stand for re-election, including Roy Bostock, Ronald Burkle and Yang. Activision Blizzard CEO Robert Kotick will stand aside. The board will be expanded to 11 members and include Icahn and two of his candidates. Icahn, who owns an aggregate just under 5 percent of Yahoo, has agreed to withdraw his nominees for consideration at the annual meeting and to vote his Yahoo shares in support of the board’s nominees, but he says he is still in favor of a sale. “While I continue to believe that the sale of the whole company or the sale of its search business in the right transaction must be given full consideration, I share the view that Yahoo’s valuable collection of assets positions it well to continue expanding its online leadership and enhancing returns to stockholders. I believe this is a good outcome and that we will have a strong working relationship going forward,” Icahn said.
Swiss drugmaker Roche has offered to buy up the rest of Genentech for $43.7 billion in cash. That’s $89 a share, an anemic 9 percent premium if you look at how the market reacted. The stock was up to $96.50 by 0715. Roche owns 55.9 percent of Genentech, the largest biotech by market cap. “We would expect Roche will have to make a significantly higher offer if it is to acquire Genentech,” analysts at Cazenove wrote in a research note. The premium offered by Roche compares with an average of 63 percent, according to Credit Suisse, for recent pharmaceutical buys of biotech companies.
Anglo-Dutch consumer goods group Unilever said it had agreed to sell its Bertolli olive oil and vinegar business to Spanish food group Grupo SOS for 630 million euros ($998.4 million). The deal is part of previously announced plans by Unilever, which makes Dove soap and Sunsilk shampoo, to sell non-core businesses with collective turnover of over 2 billion euros. Grupo SOS will acquire the worldwide license for the Bertolli brand in respect of olive oil and premium vinegar.
Other deals of the day:
* German privately owned ball-bearings maker Schaeffler said it was open for constructive talks with German tires-to-brakes maker Continental, for which it has launched an $18 billion takeover bid.
* German steel and metals trader Kloeckner & Co said it would sell its KVT unit for 325 million euros ($515 million) to private equity company Capvis.
* China’s largest motorcycle maker, Lifan Group, which is diversifying into car production, has sold a 13.5 percent stake to AIG for $90 million, two Lifan executives said.
* Infinity Bio-Energy said it bought the shares in Brazilian sugar and ethanol producer Cridasa it does not already own for about $17 million.
* National Foods, the Australian food producer owned by Japan’s Kirin Holdings, has lodged a final bid for Australian dairy producer Dairy Farmers, a source familiar with the situation said.
* French drug maker Sanofi-Aventis will pay A$560 million ($544 million) for the vitamins business of Australia’s Primary Health Care, a source close to the deal said.
* Luminar, Britain’s biggest nightclub operator, said it was interested in a tie-up between its 3D Entertainment venture and Regent Inns, but that Regent had declined to enter talks.
* Russian gas major Gazprom has agreed to buy a 25 percent stake in gas transport firm DalTransGas from the country’s largest oil producer, Rosneft, Gazprom said.
* Shareholders of Indonesia’s PT Bank Niaga and PT Bank Lippo have approved plans to merge the two, Bank Niaga said on its website.
* Ghana’s parliament delayed a decision on a deal that would allow Britain’s Vodaphone buy a 70 percent stake in Ghana Telecom, the country’s third largest mobile phone operator.
* U.S. hedge fund Harbinger remains interested in buying British satellite communications firm Inmarsat, but is suspending talks for now because of the lengthy regulatory process involved, it said.
* South African consumer goods group Tiger Brands said it had reached agreement to sell 50 percent plus 1 share of its unit Adcock Ingram Critical Care to Swiss group Baxter Healthcare.
* Spanish construction company ACS will put its 45 percent stake in electricity group Union Fenosa on sale this week and hopes to close the deal by mid-September, a source close to the deal said.
Posted on July 21st, 2008 by
Filed under: options news, stock news





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