M&C Saatchi has withdrawn its support for a £310m takeover bid from the digital marketing group Next Fifteen, saying it no longer regarded the terms as “fair and reasonable” amid pressure from another bidder.
The deal would have ended almost three decades of independence of one of Britain’s most famous advertising agencies. M&C Saatchi said the reason behind the withdrawal of its support was the decline in the value of Next Fifteen’s shares. They have fallen 28% since the deal was announced in late May.
The company said: “The M&C Saatchi directors … no longer consider the terms of the Next Fifteen offer to be fair and reasonable solely on the basis of the deterioration in value of Next Fifteen shares since the announcement date.”
London-listed Next Fifteen, whose market value has fallen to £884m from £1.2bn at the time the deal was announced, tabled a cash and share offer for M&C valuing the company at 247.2p a share that it wants to seal through a scheme of arrangement. The offer comprises 0.1637 of a new Next Fifteen share and 40p in cash.
M&C said the terms of the offer now imply a total value of 189p per M&C share. Accordingly, its directors “unanimously recommend” that M&C shareholders do not vote in favour of the scheme at the court meeting on 17 August.
M&C, founded in 1995 by the brothers Maurice and Charles Saatchi, had agreed a deal with Next Fifteen last month, fending off a rival bid from its biggest shareholder Vin Murria’s AdvancedAdvT investment vehicle.
Earlier this month the advertising firm removed Murria, until then its deputy chair, from its board, after rejecting four offers from her investment vehicle, which asked M&C to clarify its analysis of the financial terms of the competing bids.
The company board
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