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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Largest Morrisons shareholder opposed to £6.3bn takeover offer

Meanwhile, the Singapore sovereign wealth fund has joined forces with the takeover bid

General view of Morrisons Supermarket, Collingwood Centre, Preston North Road in Tynemouth.

Morrisons’ biggest shareholder has said it will not support the £6.3bn private equity-backed takeover deal for the supermarket chain in a heavy blow to the retailer’s board.

It comes around three weeks after the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s fourth largest grocer agreed to a takeover by a consortium led by US private equity firm Fortress.

Silchester International, which owns a 15.14% stake in Bradford-based Morrisons, said on Tuesday that it is “not inclined to support” the agreed deal.

Read more: £30m funding for supermarket flower supplier

The current offer is priced at 252p per share, as well as a conditional special dividend at 2p per share for investors.

Morrisons shareholders are currently due to vote on the offer, which was supported by the firm’s board of directors, at a general meeting on August 16.

The retailer agreed to the takeover move days after it rebuffed an initial £5.5bn approach from rival private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (CD&R).

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ takeover regulators have given CD&R a deadline of August 9 to either place their own firm bid for the chain or walk away.