Monsanto Going
for $56bn in Sale Deal with Bayer
· Only Three MNCs to Remain
in Field with China
Bayer
AG has reached an agreement to acquire Monsanto Co. for about $56 billion to
create the world’s biggest maker of seeds and pesticides, according to people
familiar with the matter. India too will be specially affected as a major play
in GM seed market.
The German company agreed to pay about $128 a share and
an announcement is planned imminently, said the people, who asked not to be
identified because talks are private. Bayer’s supervisory board supports the
deal, they said. Bayer is also offering an antitrust break fee of about $2
billion, one of the people said. If successful, it would lead to the biggest
deal this year and the largest ever by a German company.
Bayer’s wooing of St. Louis-based Monsanto has played
out against a backdrop of a rapidly consolidating crop and seed industry as
falling prices weighed on profits. A series of big deals may leave just a few
global players.
China National Chemical Corp. agreed in February to
acquire Syngenta AG, while DuPont Co. and Dow Chemical Co. plan to merge and
then carve out a new crop-science unit.
Spokesmen
for both companies declined to comment on the new proposal. Bayer rose 2.4
percent to 95.58 euros at 12:20 p.m. in Frankfurt trading. Monsanto gained 1.6
percent to $107.74 before the opening of U.S. markets.
Leverkusen, Germany-based Bayer first made an
unsolicited offer for Monsanto of $122 a share in May, and then bumped that in
July to $125. Both proposals were rejected by Monsanto as too low. Monsanto
later granted access to some financial accounts to conduct due diligence. Last
week, Bayer came back with a third offer of $127.50.
One impetus for Monsanto is the company’s ambition to
become a one-stop shop for farmers, and to sell a comprehensive array of fertilizers
and seeds to be used in conjunction with big data applications. That’s how
farmers are going to increase productivity and yields to feed a growing world
population, the company has said. For years, Monsanto pursued Swiss pesticide
maker Syngenta to boost its farm chemicals portfolio, making three failed
offers as recently as last year.
In
the past two decades Monsanto has pioneered the commercialization of
genetically modified organisms, or GMOs. GMO varieties of corn and soybeans now
account for more than 90 percent of corn and soybean crops in the U.S.
That
may account for the high break fee. The combination of both companies could
account for more than 30 percent of the global crop-inputs business, stoking
concern over whether the deal will be passed by competition authorities. The
recent industry consolidation will also leave potentially fewer buyers for any
assets sold off by Bayer-Monsanto to satisfy regulators.
Founded in 1901, Monsanto also used to produce
pharmaceuticals and industrial chemicals, including highly toxic ones like
polychlorinated biphenyls, now banned and commonly known as PCBs, and the
herbicide Agent Orange, which was used by the U.S. military in Vietnam.
Bayer was founded in 1863 and made its name by
introducing heroin as a cough remedy in 1896 and then aspirin in 1899. Bayer’s
stated ambition is to be the global leader in pharmaceuticals and chemicals for
people, plants and animals.