Private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (CD&R) is poised to start a bidding war for British supermarket chain Morrisons, the target of a $8.8bn offer from a group led by another U.S. buyout firm, Fortress, the Sunday Times reported.
The newspaper said CD&R was understood to have been preparing equity and debt financing for a counter-bid which could come in the next few days.
If successful, CD&R would open Morrisons convenience stores at fuel stations operated by Motor Fuel Group, which the firm owns, and it would work alongside the existing Morrisons management team, the Sunday Times said.
Subscribe to our Newsletter to increase your edge. Don’t worry about the news anymore, through our newsletter you’ll receive weekly access to what is happening. Join 120,000 other PE professionals today.
Earlier this week, British money manager M&G joined criticism of the Fortress-led bid that Morrisons has agreed to, which is worth about 6.3 billion pounds and topped a rival offer from Apollo.
Morrisons’ largest shareholder Silchester has also said it is not inclined to support the offer for Britain’s fourth-largest supermarket chain.
Source: Reuters
Can’t stop reading? Read more
Blackstone taps bond market as private credit BDCs end issuance drought
Blackstone taps bond market as private credit BDCs end issuance drought Blackstone's private...
EQT raises the stakes with revised $12.3bn bid for Intertek
EQT raises the stakes with revised $12.3bn bid for Intertek EQT has tabled an improved takeover...
Temasek’s Azalea bets on evergreen structure to democratise private equity access
Temasek's Azalea bets on evergreen structure to democratise private equity access Azalea, a unit...




