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SABMiller rejects $142b informal offer from AB InBev

Ruth David, Jonathan Browning and Matthew Campbell
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SABMiller has rejected an informal takeover offer from Anheuser-Busch InBev of about 66.4 billion pounds ($142 billion) that it considered too low, according to people familiar with the matter.

The initial proposal to the brewer of Peroni and Foster's beer, made last week, was worth slightly over 40 pounds a share, while its executives and some shareholders regard a deal at closer to 45 pounds as representing a fair value, the people said, asking not to be identified as details of the negotiations aren't public. A deal at 45 pounds per share would value SABMiller at about 73 billion pounds, and would be the largest merger this year.

London-based SABMiller communicated to AB InBev the terms at which it would be willing to negotiate after the rejection, one of the people said. No final decision has been made on a potential formal offer, and it's possible the Belgian producer of Budweiser and Stella Artois may walk away from a deal, they said.

"AB InBev is unlikely to have gone this far unless it intends to see it through." Bloomberg

SABMiller shares fell as much as 3.9 per cent and traded down 3.2 per cent at 3,643 pence at 1:30 p.m. in London. AB InBev was little changed at 97.83 euros. Representatives for both companies declined to comment.

"AB InBev is unlikely to have gone this far unless it intends to see it through," said Robert Ottenstein, an analyst at Evercore ISI. "We still believe that a transaction with SABMiller would be financially and strategically compelling, even at a potentially higher than previously assumed offer price."

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The head of The Public Investment Corporation, a South African state-owned pension fund manager that is SABMiller's fourth- largest shareholder, said on Tuesday he opposes a takeover because it could create a brewer that's too dominant, hurting consumers, as well as potentially removing the company from the Johannesburg stock exchange.

"Quite frankly I'm not in favour of it," Chief Executive Officer Daniel Matjila said by phone. "We may be creating some kind of a monopoly going forward which may have a serious impact on the global economy and beer market in general."

Matjila declined to say which way the Pretoria-based PIC, which owns 3.14 per cent of SABMiller, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, would vote on an offer should one be made.

He spoke after SABMiller on Tuesday released a surprise trading update nine days earlier than planned, in which it announced that beer volume had returned to growth in the second quarter, helped by Africa and Latin America -- a trend that could figure into a sweetened offer from AB InBev.

If successful, the combination would create a dominant global player in the brewing industry, which has been re-aligned through a decade of increasingly large mergers, and attract heavy scrutiny from antitrust regulators around the world. Partly controlled by a group of wealthy Brazilian investors led by Jorge Paulo Lemann, AB InBev is itself the result of deals to unite major Belgian, American, and Latin American brewers.

AB InBev had already reached out to Altria Group Inc., SABMiller's biggest shareholder, before it announced plans to make an approach for its rival, people with knowledge of the matter said on September 18. It's lining up lenders including Bank of America Corp. and Banco Santander SA to arrange as much as $US70 billion in financing for its takeover proposal, people familiar with the matter said last week.

SABMiller Chairman Jan du Plessis and the management team are leaning toward fighting an expected bid, the New York Post reported late Monday, citing an unidentified person with direct knowledge of the matter.

Under U.K. takeover rules, AB InBev has until 5 p.m. on October 14 to make an offer or announce it doesn't intend to proceed. SABMiller may also ask regulators for an extension to that deadline.

Bloomberg

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