US approves ChemChina's $43 bn takeover of Syngent
Under a preliminary settlement, the FTC
yesterday said it required the divestitures to address a loss of
competition over the herbicide paraquat and two other products in which
the merger would have likely led to higher prices for consumers.
US approves Chem China's $43 bn takeover of Syngenta"
US antitrust regulators approved Chem China's USD 43 billion
takeover of Swiss pesticide and seed giant Syngenta after they agreed
the Chinese company must sell three products, the Federal Trade
Commission has said.
The deal would mark the largest foreign takeover by a Chinese firm.
Under
a preliminary settlement, the FTC yesterday said it required the divestitures to address a loss of competition over the herbicide
paraquat and two other products in which the merger would have likely
led to higher prices for consumers.
The US federal agency said the
deal, as originally proposed, created antitrust problems because
Chem China's generics subsidiary ADAMA is either the first- or
second-largest generics supplier in the United States for the three
products in question.
The other two products are the insecticide
aba mectin, which protects primarily citrus and tree nut crops, and the
fungicide chloro thalonil, which protects peanuts and potatoes.
"Without
the proposed divestiture, the merger would eliminate the direct competition that exists today between Chem China generics subsidiary
ADAMA and Syngenta's branded products," the FTC said.
"The merger
would also increase the likelihood that US customers buying paraquat,
abamectin and chloro thalonil would be forced to pay higher prices or
accept reduced service for these products."
The FTC said it worked
with its counterparts in Australia, Canada, the European Union, India
and Mexico "to analyze the proposed transaction and potential remedies."
The FTC's settlement is subject to public comment for 30 days after which the commission will determine whether to finalize it.
Syngenta said in February it expects the transaction with Chem China to close in the second quarter.
The
deal is just one of several huge takeovers in the agro-chemical sector
that regulators are grappling with, with German giant Bayer offering USD
66 billion for US firm Monsanto, which in 2015 had tried to acquire Syngenta for USD 46 billion.
US giants DuPont and Dow Chemical are also merging in a USD 130 billion deal.
Last
week, DuPont said it will sell some of its pesticide business to
Philadelphia-based chemical company FMC to clear regulatory hurdles.
The
European Commission had ruled that the merger could go ahead if DuPont
divested "major parts" of its global pesticides business due to
antitrust concerns.
In exchange, DuPont will receive the health and
nutrition business from FMC along with USD 1.6 billion in cash and
working capital
Read more for Indian Stock Tips- http://bit.ly/ace_services
No comments:
Post a Comment