a-global-player

By Naoko Fujimura Jan. 15 (Bloomberg) — Shiseido Co. , Japan’s biggest cosmetics maker, agreed to acquire Bare Escentuals Inc. for about $1.7 billion in cash to expand outside a shrinking domestic market. The offer values San Francisco-based Bare Escentuals at $18.20 a share, 43 percent more than yesterday’s closing price, the companies said in a statement today. Shiseido’s largest-ever purchase gives it the bareMinerals brand sold through 800 U.S. retail outlets and 1,500 salons in its smallest regional market . The Tokyo-based company aims to raise the proportion of overseas sales to 50 percent by 2017 from 38 percent last fiscal year as falling wages and an aging population sap demand at home. “Shiseido needs to escape Japan to survive,” said Mitsuo Shimizu , an analyst at Cosmo Securities Co. in Tokyo. “The purchase will help boost its presence in North America, which has been a weak market for them.” Shiseido climbed rose 4 percent to 2,020 yen as of 11 a.m. in Tokyo, headed for its highest close in 14 months. Bare Escentuals fell 2.1 percent to $12.74 on the Nasdaq Stock Market yesterday. The stock has more than doubled during the past year. Bank of America Corp.’s Merrill Lynch is advising Shiseido and Bare Escentuals is being advised by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. After the takeover, overseas sales will account for 42 percent of Shiseido. “This acquisition further enables Shiseido to move towards our goal of becoming a global player,” Shinzo Maeda , chief executive officer of the Japanese maker of the Elixir Superieur and Maquillage brands, said in the statement. Berkshire Partners LLC, the biggest shareholder in Bare Escentuals with a 16 percent stake, agreed to tender its shares, according to the statement. Executives Retained Chief Executive Officer Leslie Blodgett as well as Myles McCormick , who is chief financial officer and chief operating officer, will remain with Bare Escentuals after the acquisition. The tender is scheduled to begin within 10 business days and is expected to be completed by the end of March. Bare Escentuals’ increased net income 11 percent to $98 million in 2008, with an 8.8 percent gain in sales to $556 million. The company had an operating profit margin of 31.5 percent, more than four times Shiseido’s 7.2 percent. Shiseido will start to include earnings from Bare Escentuals, which employs 2,779 people, next fiscal year. The Japanese company will use about 30 billion yen ($329 million) in cash and secure 150 billion yen in bridge loans to fund the acquisition. The purchase is the biggest by a Japanese cosmetics maker since Kao Corp. bought control of Kanebo Cosmetics Inc. for $3.5 billion in 2006. Shiseido’s Japan sales have fallen every month this fiscal year. Salaries in Japan have dropped for 18 straight months as the nation emerges from its worst post-war recession. Japan’s cosmetics market declined 0.3 percent to 2.2 trillion yen in 2008, according to market researcher Fuji Keizai. To contact the reporter on this story: Naoko Fujimura in Tokyo at nfujimura@bloomberg.net .

Read this article:
Shiseido Buys Bare Escentuals for $1.7 Billion as Japanese Market Shrinks

Bloomberg:

By Harichandan Arakali and Nicky Smith Sept. 30 (Bloomberg) — Bharti Airtel Ltd. and MTN Group Ltd. called off merger talks for the second time in two years, after the South African government said it couldn’t accept the terms. Bharti asked for an opportunity to revive the deal after the deadline for exclusive talks ended today. The deal “needed an approval from the government of South Africa, which has expressed its inability to accept it in the current form,” Bharti said in an e-mailed statement. India’s largest wireless company said on May 25 it offered 86 rand ($11.4) in cash plus half a Bharti stock for each MTN share for a 49 percent stake, while Africa’s largest mobile- phone company and its shareholders would acquire 36 percent of the New Delhi-based operator. Bharti said at the time the combined value of the deal may exceed $23 billion. The deal would have been the world’s biggest cross-border transaction this year. The decision to scrap talks will set back the operators’ efforts to create a company that would have helped them trim costs and challenge Vodafone Group Plc in Africa and India, where the world’s biggest mobile-phone company has been targeting growth. Bharti is facing increasing competition at home from Vodafone and Japan’s NTT DoCoMo Inc. and MTN has aimed to expand outside the continent. “It will be a huge setback” to Bharti’s aim of becoming a global player, Romal Shetty , executive director for telecommunications at KPMG’s Indian unit, said before the announcement. “The ability to leverage things will reduce, it will take time.” The South African government wants MTN to remain a South African company with local management, Communications Minister Siphiwe Nyanda said in Johannesburg today. “It would be sad if we saw this entity move into the hands and management of foreign nationals,” Nyanda said. “Its management must remain South African.” Any possible delays with the deal would not be because of the South African government, he added. To contact the reporters on this story: Harichandan Arakali in Bangalore at harakali@bloomberg.net ; Nicky Smith in Johannesburg at nsmith38@bloomberg.net .

Continue here:
Bharti, MTN Decide to Call Off Discussions on Proposed $23 Billion Merger