Grocery giant agrees to £7bn offer as takeover battle rages on

The battle for Morrisons took a fresh twist last night when a £7 billion bid was tabled for the supermarket giant.

US private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (CD&R), which kicked off the bidding war with a £5.5bn approach last month, has now tabled a £7 billion bid. It sent shares in Morrisons up a further 4.3 per cent to 291.2p by 10am this morning.

The latest approach from CD&R comes around nearly two weeks after the Morrisons board agreed to an improved to takeover offer from a US consortium led by Fortress Investment Group, valuing the supermarket chain at £6.7 billion. That offer from Fortress followed an initial approach it had made that valued Morrisons at £6.3bn.

The Fortress deal has been unanimously accepted by the board of the grocer and directors have said shareholders should vote in favour of the takeover at a meeting due in early October.

But the late intervention from CD&R means the company has withdrawn its recommendation for investors.

CD&R had last week been given an extended deadline until Friday afternoon by takeover regulators to either say whether it wants to make a new offer for Morrisons, or to walk away.

In the updated offer document, released at 9pm on Thursday night, the company said it “recognises the legacy of Sir Ken Morrison, Morrisons’ history and culture, and considers that this strong heritage is core to Morrisons and its approach to grocery retailing”.

The private equity house, which will face less scrutiny than a stock market listed business, said it “will support Morrisons in further building on these strengths” and suggested it had no plans to sell off its freehold stores.

Most supermarkets lease their sites, but Morrisons has resisted calls for several years to use sale and leaseback agreements to line the pockets of investors. It is thought CD&R could be planning a similar move.

In an attempt to allay those fears, CD&R said Morrisons’ strengths “include its freehold property portfolio, which affords greater flexibility and operational control, as well as its vertical integration, which enables it to compete successfully on price and guarantee the quality of its products in partnership with local suppliers and farmers.”

It stopped short of saying the freeholds would not be sold.

New York-based firm CD&R is one of the most firmly established investors in the sector and has been advised by former Tesco chief Sir Terry Leahy over the past 10 years.

CD&R is also the owner of forecourt giant Motor Fuel Group (MFG), sparking initial speculation that it could strike a similar deal to the acquisition of Asda by EG Group founders the Issa brothers and private equity backers TDR Capital.

Morrisons announced that it will hold a shareholder meeting to vote on the Fortress-led takeover offer on August 27.

It added: “This deadline will cease to apply if, before that time, a third party other than CD&R has announced a firm intention to make an offer for Morrisons.

“Each of Morrisons, Oppidum (the Fortress consortium) and CD&R has accepted this ruling.”

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