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KKR urges Assura to ditch Primary Health Properties as bidding war heats up

US private equity giant KKR has called on Assura to abandon a deal with rival Primary Health Properties as the bidding war for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ healthcare real estate investment trusts ramps up.

The KKR and PHP bidding war has heated up(Image: Niall Carson/PA Wire)

The battle for acquisition between private equity behemoth KKR and retail investor Primary Health Properties (PHP) has intensified, following KKR's push for Assura to abandon a previously endorsed takeover bid from PHP.

Bidco, KKR's investment vehicle – also backed by US private equity firm Stonepeak – announced on Friday that it has engaged in talks with Assura's board to advocate for its deal, as reported by .

Bidco criticised PHP's "misleading" assertion that the decline in its share price was due to temporary merger arbitrage activity – where certain investors were shorting PHP whilst purchasing Assura shares.

The investment company contended that many of these investors were not shielded against risk and likely to offload PHP shares once they acquire them, exerting additional strain on the company's share price.

On Friday, PHP also encountered pressure as it issued a statement encouraging Assura shareholders to accept its offer. The company revealed that only a small percentage of shareholders had done so thus far and warned that they needed to adhere to a deadline of 12 August.

This deadline aligns with º£½ÇÊÓÆµ takeover code stipulations, whereby an offer can only be declared unconditional – meaning PHP has secured sufficient acceptances to finalise the deal – after a 'minimum offer period' which concludes around Day 55 of a proposal.

CMA scrutinises Assura and PHP merger

Bidco stated the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) was examining a proposed merger between Assura and PHP, given that the transaction involves two significant owners and operators of primary care and community health facilities across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

The CMA scrutinises potential transactions that could grant a combined entity excessive market dominance and reduce competition.