Video | Agriculture | Confidence | Economy | Energy | Employment | Finance | Media | Property | RBNZ | Science | SOEs | Tax | Technology | Telecoms | Tourism | Transport | Search

 


Comvita spurns hostile Cerebos bid

Comvita spurns hostile Cerebos bid

By Paul McBeth

Oct. 14 (BusinessDesk) – Manuka honey-based wound care maker Comvita is urging shareholders not to accept a $71.6 million offer to buy the company from Cerebos New Zealand, the local bid vehicle of Singapore-listed Cerebos Pacific.

Chairman Neil Craig told investors the offer is “unsolicited, unwelcome, opportunistic and your directors have reason to believe this offer undervalues Comvita by a considerable margin.” In a letter to shareholders, he advises holding onto their stock pending further advice from directors, and said the company is on the verge of reaping the rewards of long-term planning.

“The directors consider that Comvita’s current share price on the NZX does not fully reflect the value of the company and the potential to increasingly reward shareholders from this year onwards,” Craig said. “This offer by Cerebos is an opportunistic attempt to capture the benefit of the company’s innovation and hard work that our loyal and patient shareholders deserve.”

The rebuff comes after the Cerebos vehicle made an offer of $2.50 a share for Comvita, a premium of 19 percent to yesterday’s closing price, in a bid to take control of the local manuka honey-based wound care manufacturer and delist it.

Cerebos plans to operate the company on a standalone basis, and says it will look to use its links into Asia to market the brand into one of the fastest growing regions in the world.

“Cerebos would be looking to explore areas of collaboration,” sister company Cerebos Gregg’s chairman Trevor Kerr said in a statement. “In particular, we can provide strategic assistance in sales and marketing in Asia where the Comvita brands are not yet well established.”

Comvita’s shares were unchanged at $2.10, and have surged 42 percent this year, valuing the company at $62 million by market capitalisation. The stock is rated a ‘buy’ by the one analyst who follows the company, according to Reuters.

The offer comes a month after Comvita settled a patent dispute with Brightwake, where it granted a sub-licence to the British rival letting it manufacture, distribute and sell its Algivon brand in territories where the Comvita subsidiary Apimed Medial Honey has patent protections. As part of the settlement, Comvita avoided a 226,000 pound payment.

The Te Puke-based company expects annual profit of between $7.3 million and $8.2 million, with sales likely to be between $91 million and $95 million.

Cerebos Gregg’s, whose local brands include Caffe L’Affare coffee, Bisto gravies, and Raro drink powder, recently invested $13 million to expand facilities in a joint venture at Mount Maunganui, and is spending $6 million on the country’s only instant coffee producing plant in Dunedin.

“We believe the business has potential which can only be fulfilled by an increased investment in research and development and brand building – even at the expense of short to mid-term profitability,” Kerr said.

The offer is conditional on Cerebos reaching 90 percent acceptances to force the compulsory acquisition of the remaining shares, and let it delist the company. If it falls short and decides to declare the takeover unconditional, it will “seek appropriate representation on the Comvita board and will participate in decisions relating to Comvita and its future through the Comvita board,” according to the offer document.

Shares in the parent Cerebos Pacific fell 0.6 percent to S$4.78 on the Singapore Exchange yesterday, and have dropped 2.4 percent this year. The company has a market capitalisation of US$1.19 billion.

(BusinessDesk)

 
 
 
 
 
Business Headlines | Sci-Tech Headlines

BUDGET 2012:
Parliament Debate Live - Video Of Budget 2011
Keith Ng Interactive Graphic: How the Budget Breaks Down
BUDGET 2012 - FULL COVERAGE: Reports / Analysis - Press Kit - Reaction (from everybody) - Previews (from everybody) - Pre-Budget Announcements

Gordon Campbell: On the Budget’s Spreadsheet Victories

It wasn’t as if expectations were sky high, exactly. Chances are, it was always more likely that we’d be seeing Bigfoot rampage through the Beehive lock-up than catch a glimpse of a credible growth agenda from this government. More >>


Sludge Budget Report - Short The Dollar! MEMO: To international bankers FROM: C.D. Sludge Please short the dollar! It'll be good for both you and us. And you know you want to. Greexit, Eurogeddon... watch out... flight to quality and all that. Follow your instincts. The NZ Debt Management Office has been so surprised at the unprecedentedly low interest rates that it can borrow at that it has already entirely pre-funded the 2013 fiscal deficit - all $8 billion of it! More >>

Pattrick Smellie Comment: Doddling along the best we can hope forCriticising Budgets for lacking vision or imagination is like shooting fish in a barrel, but even so, this year's Budget again feels like a missed opportunity. Perhaps it's the intrusion of real world needs that means the government couldn't make better political use of the $558.8 million it expects to gather in its first partial asset sale. More >>

 

BusinessDesk: NZ dollar hits 6-mth low, revives, as EU meets; budget looms
The New Zealand dollar climbed from a six-month low as European Union leaders meet amid talk Greece could leave the euro zone and ahead of the budget locally which is expected to chart the route back to fiscal surplus. More >>

Also:

EARLIER:


Media: Quickflix welcomes probe of Sky TV content deals
ASX-listed Quickflix has welcomed the New Zealand antitrust regulator's probe into Sky Network Television's content deals with internet service providers, saying the issues raised by the Commerce Commission are "serious and real."

Sky's shares sank 8.3 percent to a two-and-a-half month low $5 after the regulator said it will investigate the pay-TV operator's contracts with ISPs and potential barriers to accessing content. The announcement was made after the commission approved a joint venture between Sky and state-owned Television New Zealand to launch a budget pay-TV platform, Igloo.More >>

ALSO:


Fruit FlyMPI: No Fruit Fly Outbreak Detected to Date as Actions Continue
The Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) reports that testing on samples from fruit fly traps in the Auckland Controlled Area has so far shown no sign of further fruit flies.

However as a precautionary measure, the Ministry continues a large field effort to ensure that if any of the pest insects are present, they are not able to spread from the Avondale area where the one male fly was found last week.
More >>

ALSO:

 
 
 
 
 
Business
Search Scoop  
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news