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Pub group merger bites dust as Punch pulls out



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Published Date: 29 March 2008
A DEAL that could have led to some of Scotland's best-known watering holes falling under common ownership unravelled yesterday after industry giant Punch Taverns backed out of a £3.7 billion merger with rival Mitchells & Butlers.


Punch told investors it was still considering a joint offer with a third party, though sources close to the matter believe M&B is determined to remain independent.

The merger proposal would have created Britain's biggest pub landlord, with a 1
0,500-strong estate, bringing the bulk of the pubs once owned by former brewing giants Allied, Bass, Courage, Watneys and Scottish & Newcastle under single ownership.

North of the Border, Punch's sprawling portfolio includes the likes of Edinburgh's Café Royal Circle Bar and the Beehive Inn, while the M&B line-up includes Deacon Brodie's Tavern and Greyfriars Bobby in the Scottish capital and Glasgow's famous Horseshoe Bar.

Plans for a tie-up came after M&B, which also runs the All Bar One chain, suffered massive losses on transactions relating to a property deal it was forced to abandon last summer amid the credit crunch.

Punch had proposed a 50/50 merger plus £175 million in cash, but it said it had pulled back after a closer look at M&B's books and pressure from some of Punch's biggest shareholders.

Last night, shares in Punch closed almost 7 per cent higher at 554p, while those of M&B rose 4 per cent to 342.5p.

Punch confirmed it had been approached by a number of groups interested in "possible transactions involving Mitchells & Butlers".

Analysts said Punch and its partners could bid for bits of M&B if the latter decides to offload itself piecemeal.

Despite M&B's property troubles, rivals and private equity firms would once have been falling over themselves to buy its 2,000-odd pubs. However, the global credit crunch has left would-be buyers with few options and almost ruled out a cash deal.

One source said management was "determined to keep M&B independent" and "not particularly engaged" in the auction process.

BlueOar analyst Mark Brumby said: "If foot-dragging has secured (M&B's] independence ... then that may not be viewed positively. Though M&B possibly 'should' be taken over, the question is by whom.

"The City Code on Takeovers and Mergers requires any offer for M&B involving Punch must now be 'on less-favourable terms'."

Punch is understood to have held talks with private equity players Blackstone and CVC as well as a number of others that had been circling M&B. Punch chief executive Giles Thorley is also chairman of Blackstone-owned Tragus, which runs the restaurant chains Café Rouge and Strada.

Some major investors in M&B – chiefly property entrepreneur Robert Tchenguiz, who has a 23 per cent holding – see it as a property asset and are keen to see it maximise the value of its estate.





The full article contains 493 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 28 March 2008 8:47 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
 

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