º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

Spectris agrees to £3.8bn takeover by Advent but KKR mulls rival bid

The FTSE 250 engineering group has agreed a 3.8 billion pound takeover by US private equity Advent, but KKR has confirmed it is in the "advanced stages of due diligence" and is considering a rival bid

City of London skyline(Image: PA Archive/PA Images)

Industrial heavyweight Spectris has nodded to a colossal £3.8bn acquisition by American private equity firm Advent, yet whispers of a bidding tussle are in the air with KKR potentially crafting a counter-offer.

The FTSE 250-listed company now carries a hefty price tag of £37.73 per share under the agreement, prompting its shares to leap by an impressive 13.5 per cent at market open on Monday, reaching approximately 3,726, as reported by .

KKR, no stranger to significant market plays, has thrown its hat into the ring, acknowledging its readiness to duel with Advent over a Spectris takeover. The powerhouse confirmed it's deep into "advance stages of due diligence" and is setting up finances for a bid following the public announcement of the takeover.

With intentions clear, KKR has been in proactive discussions with the Spectris board since its initial proposition on June 2.

Communicating to its stakeholders, KKR urged them "strongly encourages shareholders to take no action with regards to the Advent offer."

Spectris another blow to London market

The pact inked between Spectris and Advent, which came to light earlier this month, signals yet another notch against the LSE as domestic entities shed their listings in the face of international titans' advances.

London's beleaguered bourse has stumbled through an exodus of delistings in recent times - illustrated by the Canadian consultancy titan's grab of engineering consultant Ricardo, coupled with homegrown quantum computing trailblazer Oxford Ionics succumbing to a buyout from New York rival IonQ.

Conversations with City AM analysts have highlighted the irresistible allure of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ stocks, tagged as "cheap and undervalued", to those hunting for investment steals.