Anheuser snubs takeover bid
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Anheuser-Busch Cos (BUD.N) rejected InBev's INTB.BR $46.3 billion (23.3 billion pounds) takeover bid on Thursday, calling it inadequate, but the largest U.S. brewer left the door open to a higher bid.
Anheuser's board unanimously rejected the Belgian-Brazilian company's $65-a-share bid to create the world's largest brewer, saying the offer undervalued its assets and its growth plan, which includes a newly revamped cost-cutting program code-named "Blue Ocean."
But Anheuser CEO August Busch IV, in a letter to InBev Chief Executive Carlos Brito, said the board of the maker of Budweiser and Michelob beers will continue to consider any strategic alternative that would be in the best interests of Anheuser-Busch shareholders as it pursues its plan.
"The board is open to consider any proposal that would provide full and certain value to Anheuser-Busch shareholders," said Busch, whose great-great-grandfather turned a small local brewer into an international player.
InBev, for its part, reiterated its "strong preference" for "a friendly combination" but, in a possible prelude to a hostile campaign, filed a lawsuit on Thursday to establish that shareholders could remove Anheuser's entire board of directors.
"This is one step closer to just tendering the shares," Morningstar analyst Ann Gilpin said of the InBev lawsuit.
Anheuser responded by amending its bylaws to strengthen its defences against overturning control of the board.
Another option could be to go directly to shareholders in a hostile bid, Gilpin said, guessing that it would succeed in getting the required shares tendered. Continued...

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