Thales agrees 4.8 billion euro Gemalto takeover to trump rival French bid
The bidding contest for Gemalto has come after a difficult year for the Franco-Dutch group
Aerospace and defense group Thales has agreed to buy chipmaker Gemalto for 4.8 billion euros ($5.6 billion), trumping an earlier bid by fellow French firm Atos to take aim at a fast-growing digital security market.
The bidding contest for Gemalto has come after a difficult year for the Franco-Dutch group in which profit warnings have hurt its share price and overshadowed its attempt to shift from a slowing market for phone SIM cards toward security services such as data encryption and biometric passports.
“This is a terrific project,” Thales CEO Patrice Caine told reporters on Sunday. “In digital, Gemalto and Thales are like twins.”
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Caine said his firm’s bid represented a total of 5.6 billion euros ($6.6 billion), including 800 million of debt in addition to its offer for shares.
This showed its basic 51 euro per share offer for Gemalto was worth 4.8 billion euros in comparison with Atos’ 4.3 billion bid based on a 46 euro per share price.
Atos saw its offer rejected by Gemalto this week but said it would pursue its bid.
Atos declined to comment on the deal between Thales and Gemalto.
Thales’ all-cash bid has the unanimous backing of the both companies’ boards, Thales and Gemalto said in an earlier statement.
The agreement calls for Thales’ digital activities to be merged with Gemalto to create a business with 3.5 billion euros in sales and which would be a top-three global player in digital security, they said.
“RIGHT DIRECTION”
Christophe Castaner, a junior minister in the French government and head of the party of President Emmanuel Macron, told France 3 television the deal was “in the right direction”.
The French state is the largest shareholder in Thales, while state-owned bank Bpifrance is Gemalto’s second-biggest shareholder.
Bpifrance said this week it was favorable to consolidation between two French companies in the tech sector.
Thales will be able to finance the offer through its available cash resources and a 4.0 billion euro fully committed credit arrangement secured for the Gemalto offer, it said.
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Thales and Gemalto said their digital security entity would generate pre-tax cost synergies of between 100 million and 150 million euros by 2021, as well as meaningful revenue synergies.
The deal, expected to close in the second half of 2018, would have a positive effect on earnings per share of 15-20 per cent, before synergies, from the first year, they said.
Thales did not expect job losses from the takeover and pledged to maintain current job levels at Gemalto’s French operations until at least the end of 2019.
However, union officials at Gemalto cautioned that the announcement did not refer to the traditional chip card activity. Gemalto last month announced 288 job cuts in France in response to a declining chip market.
The bidding contest for Gemalto has come after a difficult year for the Franco-Dutch group in which profit warnings have hurt its share price and overshadowed its attempt to shift from a slowing market for phone SIM cards toward security services such as data encryption and biometric passports.
“This is a terrific project,” Thales CEO Patrice Caine told reporters on Sunday. “In digital, Gemalto and Thales are like twins.”
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Caine said his firm’s bid represented a total of 5.6 billion euros ($6.6 billion), including 800 million of debt in addition to its offer for shares.
This showed its basic 51 euro per share offer for Gemalto was worth 4.8 billion euros in comparison with Atos’ 4.3 billion bid based on a 46 euro per share price.
Atos saw its offer rejected by Gemalto this week but said it would pursue its bid.
Atos declined to comment on the deal between Thales and Gemalto.
Thales’ all-cash bid has the unanimous backing of the both companies’ boards, Thales and Gemalto said in an earlier statement.
The agreement calls for Thales’ digital activities to be merged with Gemalto to create a business with 3.5 billion euros in sales and which would be a top-three global player in digital security, they said.
“RIGHT DIRECTION”
Christophe Castaner, a junior minister in the French government and head of the party of President Emmanuel Macron, told France 3 television the deal was “in the right direction”.
The French state is the largest shareholder in Thales, while state-owned bank Bpifrance is Gemalto’s second-biggest shareholder.
Bpifrance said this week it was favorable to consolidation between two French companies in the tech sector.
Thales will be able to finance the offer through its available cash resources and a 4.0 billion euro fully committed credit arrangement secured for the Gemalto offer, it said.
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Thales and Gemalto said their digital security entity would generate pre-tax cost synergies of between 100 million and 150 million euros by 2021, as well as meaningful revenue synergies.
The deal, expected to close in the second half of 2018, would have a positive effect on earnings per share of 15-20 per cent, before synergies, from the first year, they said.
Thales did not expect job losses from the takeover and pledged to maintain current job levels at Gemalto’s French operations until at least the end of 2019.
However, union officials at Gemalto cautioned that the announcement did not refer to the traditional chip card activity. Gemalto last month announced 288 job cuts in France in response to a declining chip market.