Market Updates
Laidlaw Accepts $3.6 B Offer
Elena
09 Feb, 2007
New York City
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First Group said it will pay $35.25 a share for Laidlaw, the biggest school and intercity bus operator in the U.S. The deal represents an 11% premium to Thursday''s closing price. Shares in First Group gained 4.5% in London. Laidlaw shares jumped 8.8% in pre-market trading.
[R]8:30AM Laidlaw International agreed to be bought by the U.K.’s First Group for $3.6 B.[/R]
Laidlaw International Inc. ((LI)) agreed to be acquired by the U.K.''s First Group Plc in a deal worth $3.6 billion, including the assumption of around $700 million of debt. First Group said it will pay $35.25 a share for Laidlaw, the biggest school and intercity bus operator in the U.S. The deal represents an 11% premium to Thursday''s closing price.
The U.K. group, which operates bus and rail services across Britain, said the deal will create a more robust business and should result in annual cost savings of around $70 million. But First Group said that Laidlaw''s Greyhound intercity bus service could be sold off after the deal as it may not fit with its own operations. Greyhound has around 11,000 staff and contributed to roughly 40% of the U.S. group''s $3.1 billion revenue in fiscal 2006.
Laidlaw agreed to pay First Group a fee of up to $78 million in certain circumstances if the deal does fails, while First Group would pay a break fee of $43.35 million. Shares in First Group gained 4.5% in London. Laidlaw shares jumped 8.8% in pre-market trading.
[R]6:30AM European equities rebound Friday on banking stocks.[/R]
European markets were higher on Friday. By mid morning, Frankfurt Xetra Dax added 0.7% to 6,923.16, the CAC 40 in Paris gained 0.7% to 5,703.12 and London FTSE 100 climbed 0.8% to 6,394.7.
Advancers
Banks were in favor this morning. ABN Amro target price was upgraded on Friday by Fox-Pitt Kelton and the Dutch bank shares gained 1.7%. SEB, the Swedish bank, gained 1.7% after posting better-than-expected Q4 operating profit on strong capital market trading gains. In the telecom sector, Alcatel-Lucent gained 2.9% in spite of reporting a Q4 loss, as it targeted pre-tax savings of 1.7 billion euros over the next three years, and cutting up to 12,500 jobs. DaimlerChrysler lifted the auto sector after Citigroup upgraded the German carmaker from hold to buy and Peugeot rebounded 1.3%, having fallen in the previous two sessions after posting a narrower operating margin in 2006.
Decliners
Sanofi-Aventis shares led the decline in Paris, trading down 2.7% after it said that it lost a patent infringement suit filed in a U.S. district court in California against Amphastar and Teva Pharmaceutical over the Lovenox drug.
Oil and gold
Crude oil declined as traders reassessed the impact of an oilfield shutdown in California that triggered prices rally above $60 a barrel for the first time in five weeks. Oil for March delivery dropped 22 cents to $59.49 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange in early trade in London. Brent crude oil declined 35 cents to $58.68 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange. Gold fell in London as a five-week rally to prices above $660 an ounce failed to attract new buyers. Gold for immediately delivery dropped $1.50, or 0.2%, to $658.95 an ounce.
Currencies
The dollar inched back slightly against the euro on Friday, after indications by the European Central Bank that it would increase its key interest rates next month. The 13-nation euro bought $1.3003 in early Friday trading, down slightly from $1.3038 in late New York trading. The British pound bought $1.9458, down from the $1.9580 it reached Thursday following a decision by the Bank of England to keep its rates unchanged at 5.25%. The dollar advanced slightly against the Japanese yen, to 121.45, up from 121.05 yen Thursday.
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