Bain, which is supported by Fuji Soft’s founding family, has yet to launch a tender offer
US PRIVATE equity firm Bain Capital said it may withdraw its tender offer proposal for Japanese IT firm Fuji Soft, after rival suitor KKR raised its offer above Bain’s in a protracted bidding war.
Bain Capital “is carefully considering its future policy, including the option of withdrawing” the proposal, it said on Monday (Feb 10).
Bain’s possible concession would bring to an end months of intense competition with its US rival to take control of Fuji Soft.
Bain had persevered in the bidding war even with rejection from the company’s board – a rare step in Japan – citing “strong concerns and distrust” over Fuji Soft’s response and arguing the rejection harmed the interests of minority shareholders.
However, KKR raised its offer price last week to 9,850 yen per share from 9,451 yen per share, above Bain’s most recent offer of 9,600 yen per share in December.
Bain had planned to launch its tender offer in early February.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
The saga underscores an increasingly competitive dealmaking environment in Japan, as global investment firms target Japanese companies that are seen as having underutilised assets or ineffective corporate governance.
Fuji Soft shares ended down 0.2 per cent at 9,960 yen on Monday. The Tokyo stock market is closed on Tuesday due to a public holiday.
KKR currently has a 33.97 per cent stake in Fuji Soft following the first stage of a two-part bid in which two activist investors – 3D Investment Partners and Farallon Capital – agreed to tender their shares to KKR.
Bain, which is supported by Fuji Soft’s founding family, has yet to launch a tender offer. REUTERS
Share with us your feedback on BT’s products and services