º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Opinionopinion

GKN takeover end game

Professor David Bailey gives his opinion on what the end game will be in the Melrose bid for GKN

GKN's chairman has urged shareholders to reject a second offer from Melrose

We're entering the end game in the Melrose bid for GKN. The outcome is finely balanced and too close to call.

Melrose may have finally and inevitably upped its "opportunistic" bid for GKN from £7.4 billion to £8.1 billion (with GKN shareholders getting 60 per cent of the ownership of Melrose) but GKN management had already landed a blow on Melrose by agreed to merge its GLN Driveline business with Dana.

The revised bid from Melrose still undervalues GKN, especially its aerospace operations.

Moreover, as I've been saying here in Birmingham Post blogs for a while, Melrose is trying to bite off more than it has ever chewed before given the size of GKN.

Moreover, there is no guarantee Melrose could improve GKN performance in markets unfamiliar to Melrose.

Witness Melrose's inability to turn things around at engineering firm Brush. And GKN isn't even in an turnaround situation.

A key plank of the GKN defence came in the decision last week to merge its auto businesses with that of the US-based auto-supplier Dana.

That deal values GKN Driveline at an Enterprise Value (EV) of £4.4 billion.