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PRIVACY
Professional Services

Direct Line shares surge 42% after rejecting £3.3bn Aviva takeover offer

The FTSE 250 insurer said the cash-and-stock offer from its larger rival was "highly opportunistic and substantially undervalued the company"

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Direct Line, the FTSE 250-listed insurer, saw its shares surge by as much as 42% on Thursday morning after it turned down a £3.3bn takeover bid from larger competitor Aviva. The proposal, which was made on 19 November, was unanimously rejected by Direct Line's board, who described it as "highly opportunistic and substantially undervalued the company".

Aviva's unsuccessful 250p offer was divided equally between cash and shares. Currently, Direct Line's share price is trading at around 224p, up from 159p at Wednesday’s close, indicating that investors are anticipating a higher offer or counter-bid, as reported by .

Meanwhile, Aviva's share price fell by as much as 3.4% in early trading, making it the biggest faller on the FTSE 100 on Thursday morning. Aviva, the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's largest insurer, is the second company that Direct Line has fended off this year, having previously received two takeover offers from Belgian rival Ageas in March – the second valuing it at £3.2bn.

Aviva stated that acquiring Direct Line would be in line with its strategy to boost growth in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ market and shift towards capital-light business lines.

"Direct Line is playing hard to get, again," commented Matt Britzman, an analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.

"There’s a case to be made that Aviva is a better suiter, given it already shares markets with Direct Line in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, but it’ll need to up its game – and its offer – if it wants Direct Line to take the proposal seriously."

Under the leadership of CEO Amanda Blanc, Aviva has been shedding several businesses in Europe and Asia over recent years to refocus on its domestic market. It marked its return to the Lloyd’s of London marketplace earlier this year through the £242m acquisition of Probitas.

"We believe this is a reasonable offer, which captures Direct Line’s excess capital and discounts a turnaround in Direct Line’s profitability in the next two years," commented Andreas Van Embden, an analyst at Peel Hunt. The investment bank suggested "there is scope to sweeten the bid" to between 260p and 265p.