Deals and IPOs

BASF shares fall after report it's weighing DuPont bid

Shares in BASF fell after a media report that the world's top chemicals group by sales was evaluating a counter bid for DuPont, which late last year agreed to merge with Dow Chemical.

BASF shares traded 2.3 percent lower, one of the biggest decliners among German blue-chips, with traders citing a report by Bloomberg that the company was working with banks and advisers to examine the merits of such a move.

The market reaction was characterized by a mixture of skepticism about whether BASF would follow through with a bid and concerns about it getting dragged into a potentially expensive takeover battle.

DuPont products are shown for sale in a hardware store in National City, California, December 9, 2015.
Mike Blake | Reuters

"We just don't see it," Bernstein analysts wrote in a note.

"We think BASF cannot come up with a more attractive offer than the current Dow-DuPont transaction," they said, adding BASF would struggle to raise the expected $72 billion for DuPont.

BASF declined to comment.

DuPont and Dow Chemical in December agreed to combine in an all-stock merger valued at $130 billion, combining two of the biggest and oldest U.S. chemical producers.

DuPont and Dow merger could face hurdles...
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DuPont and Dow merger could face hurdles...

"BASF joining the race for DuPont would potentially overstretch BASF's balance sheet, we think," Equinet analyst Michael Schaefer wrote.

The report comes less than two weeks after BASF Chief Executive Kurt Bock dismissed suggestions that the group needed to pursue large deals to transform its diversified chemicals and oil business.

In contrast to his predecessor Juergen Hambrecht, now the supervisory board chairman, Bock has eschewed major takeover deals at the group's core chemicals and plastics businesses during his almost five-year tenure, which has seen cutbacks and divestments.