Supermarket chain Morrisons won at auction by US private equity firm with £7bn bid

Business

A US private equity firm has won the auction for British supermarket group Morrisons with a £7bn bid.

Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (CD&R) bid 287 pence per share.

Morrisons is Britain’s fourth-biggest supermarket by market share, after market leader Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Asda.

Based in Bradford, the business began as an egg and butter merchant in 1899.

The battle for Morrisons is the most high-profile among a spate of bids for British companies this year, reflecting private equity’s appetite for cash-generating assets.

The Takeover Panel, which governs the process for M&A deals in Britain, moved to an auction because neither bidder had declared their offers final.

The panel said the US firm outbid a consortium led by the Softbank owned Fortress Investment Group, which had offered 286 pence.

Morrisons’ board, due to meet later, is now expected to recommend that shareholders accept the new offer at their meeting on 19 October.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Solar Missions in 2025: Heliophysics Projects and Spacecrafts That Will Study the Sun
Jamie Lee Curtis Recreated Her Viral Perfect Gyrating Clip, And What An Icon
Trump To Be America’s First Felon President As SCOTUS Humiliates Him While Denying Sentencing Delay
Energy bills could rise more as continent effectively rationing gas with storage levels low | Money News
The Social Reading App That Turned “Anti-Woke Pundit”