Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Thursday, Jun 12, 2008
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version | Audio


News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Home Page - Pharmaceuticals
Corporate - Mergers & Acquisitions
Get Latest Quote and Company Info
Daiichi Sankyo to buy 51% in Ranbaxy at Rs 737/share

Deal value at $3.4 b-$4.6 b; open offer for 20%


Post acquisition

Ranbaxy to remain a listed company in India.

Malvinder Singh to continue as CEO and MD.

Singh family to exit after deal.


– Ramesh Sharma

Joining hands: Mr Malvinder Mohan Singh, CEO and Managing Director, Ranbaxy, and Mr Takashi Shoda, President and CEO, Daiichi Sankyo Co Ltd, at a press conference in the Capital on Wednesday.

Our Bureau
Advertisement

New Delhi, June 11 In one of the biggest deals in the pharmaceutical sector, Japan’s second-largest pharmaceutical company Daiichi Sankyo will buy up to 51 per cent stake in Ranbaxy Laboratories at Rs 737 a share.

The value of the transaction is expected to be between $3.4 billion and $4.6 billion taking Ranbaxy’s enterprise value to $8.5 billion compared with $5 billion based on the company’s current share price.

Under the deal, Daiichi Sankyo will acquire 34.8 per cent stake (28 per cent post equity-capital dilution) held by the promoter Mr Malvinder Singh and family, 9.5 per cent through preferential allotment of equity shares and another 4.5 per cent through share warrants to be issued on a preferential basis. The company will also make an open offer to the public shareholders for acquiring another 20 per cent.

Once the deal is completed, the Singh family will cease to have any stake in the company though Mr Malvinder Singh will continue to lead the pharmaceutical major as its Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director.


Explaining the rationale for the move, Mr Singh said, “The decision was taken in the interest of the future growth prospects of the company, employees and the shareholders.”

Post acquisition, Ranbaxy would become a debt-free firm. The two firms said they plan to keep Ranbaxy a listed entity in India even as it retained the identity and brand.

The combined market capitalisation of both companies would be around $30 billion making it the world’s 15th largest pharmaceutical company. The proposed open-offer price of Rs 737 represents a premium of 53.5 per cent to Ranbaxy’s average daily closing price on the National Stock Exchange for the three months ending June 10, 2008. Ranbaxy’s shares closed at Rs 560 on the Bombay Stock Exchange on Wednesday.

There would be 10 members on the board, of which Ranbaxy will appoint four members including Mr Malvinder Singh.

The transaction is expected to be completed by the end of March 2009. The company has also decided not to pursue the proposed demerger of its New Drug Discovery Research (NDDR) in a bid to synergise the R&D unit with Daiichi Sankyo’s research capabilities. “The proposed transaction is in line with our goal to be a ‘global pharma innovator’ and provides the opportunity to complement our emerging market strategy,” said Mr Takashi Shoda, President & CEO of Daiichi Sankyo Company Ltd.

More Stories on : Pharmaceuticals | Mergers & Acquisitions | Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Hiring

Stories in this Section
Monsoon hits Nagpur even as systems weaken


Farmers likely to feel the pinch of di-ammonium phosphate shortage
High global prices spoil fertiliser party
Panel to help combat aviation fuel price rise
Daiichi Sankyo to buy 51% in Ranbaxy at Rs 737/share
‘This sale is for strategic growth’
Ranbaxy stake sale — When predator turned prey
Ranbaxy to serve Japanese generic ambitions
‘We want to be number one player in Japan’
Premium for Ranbaxy buy among the highest
Essar hikes offer for Esmark to $19 a share
Sponge iron unit sale positive for Grasim
PSL: Buoyant order flows spell strong revenue visibility
Crompton Greaves (Rs 251.55): Buy
Ranbaxy: ‘Bought on rumour and sold on news’
Day Trading Guide
Banks begin to rejig investment portfolios
Repo rate hike: Analysts expect market to open weak today
US Bill seeks to ease green card restrictions
RBI hikes repo rate to 8%
Valuing art: The role of provenance and auction
‘IPL franchisees may have better margins than Arsenal, Man U’


Brandline



The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2008, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line