Australia’s Virtus accepts $514 million sweetened CapVest bid, topping BGH offer

Australia’s Virtus accepts $514 million sweetened CapVest bid, topping BGH offer

March 14 (Reuters) – Australia’s Virtus Health Ltd said on Monday it had accepted a sweetened A$704.8 million ($514 million) takeover offer from CapVest Partners LLP, which topped an improved offer from rival bidder BGH Capital.However, the months-long bidding war for the in vitro fertilization service provider was not necessarily over as the deal with London-based CapVest allows the Virtus board to consider a superior proposal from Melbourne-based BGH or another party.CapVest’s revised cash offer of A$8.25 per share is a 7% premium to Virtus’s Thursday close and a 58% premium to its close on Dec. 13, before the bidding war broke out.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterThe deal, unanimously recommended by the company’s board, knocks out a A$8.10 per share offer from Melbourne-based BGH Capital made after the market close on March 10. That offer was conditional on Virtus not signing an implementation deed with London-based CapVest.The latest CapVest deal includes a potential simultaneous off-market takeover offer, if it does not reach the required minimum threshold of 50% shareholder acceptance.Virtus’ share price has jumped around 64% since the end of 2019. read more ($1 = 1.3723 Australian dollars)Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterReporting by Savyata Mishra in Bengaluru; Editing by Richard Chang and Jane WardellOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. .

Australia’s AGL Energy rejects $3.5 bln offer, backs decision to split

Australia’s AGL Energy rejects $3.5 bln offer, backs decision to split

  • Australia’s 2nd richest man, Canada’s Brookfield made joint bid
  • Offer was at a 4.7% premium to AGL’s last close
  • AGL says demerger plans on track

Feb 21 (Reuters) – Australian power producer AGL Energy Ltd on Monday rejected a $3.54 billion takeover offer from billionaire Mike Cannon-Brookes and Canada’s Brookfield Asset Management (BAMa.TO) in favour of its plan of splitting in two this year.AGL said the A$7.50 apiece proposal from Cannon-Brookes, Australia’s second-richest man and co-founder of software firm Atlassian, and the Canadian buyout group was a 4.7% premium to the stock’s Friday close and undervalued it.”The proposal does not offer an adequate premium for a change of control and is not in the best interests of AGL Energy shareholders,” AGL Chairman Peter Botten said.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterThe unsolicited cash proposal with an option for AGL shareholders to elect a scrip alternative also provided limited other information about how the deal would be structured, Botten said.Cannon-Brookes’ investment vehicle, Grok Ventures, and Brookfield did not immediately respond to a request for comment.The profits and value of AGL, Australia’s biggest polluter, have shrunk on government pressure to cut retail rates, waning investor appetite for coal-fired power and an influx of solar and wind energy into the grid.The Australian Financial Review had reported on Sunday that the parties made a joint bid for AGL which included plans to halt its proposed split into a bulk power generator and a carbon-neutral energy retailer. AGL plans to re-brand as Accel Energy and hold the company’s coal-fired power plants and wind farm contracts. It would spin off AGL Australia Ltd, the country’s biggest retailer of electricity and gas, into a separately listed company. read more AGL said earlier this month it had made significant progress in its demerger plans and repeated on Monday that the split was on track to be completed by June. “The board is confident that the demerger will create a strong future for both parts of the business,” Botten said.($1 = 1.3961 Australian dollars)Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterReporting by Harish Sridharan and Shashwat Awasthi in Bengaluru; editing by Grant McCoolOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. .

Analysis: Where now after 2% yield? Bond investors take stock

Analysis: Where now after 2% yield? Bond investors take stock

The Federal Reserve building is seen in Washington, U.S., January 26, 2022. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File PhotoRegister now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterNEW YORK, Feb 10 (Reuters) – U.S. Treasury yields have shot higher this year, rising faster than many forecast. Investors are now assessing if anticipation of a more hawkish Fed will continue to push levels up, with the potential to upset riskier assets.Expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve may increase rates more aggressively than anticipated to counter rising inflation have pushed up yields while flattening the U.S. Treasury yield curve. That matters as bond yields impact global asset prices as well as consumer loans and mortgages. The shape of the U.S. Treasury yield curve can also help predict how the economy will fare.On Thursday, yields on 10-year notes hit 2% after higher-than-anticipated inflation data. Federal funds rate futures showed an increased chance of a half percentage-point tightening at next month’s meeting after the data, while strategists said the data increased the chances of swifter moves to reduce the Fed’s balance sheet. The central bank’s nearly $9 trillion portfolio doubled in size during the pandemic. read more Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegister“The market is starting to price in a much more aggressive path of rate hikes … clearly there is a sense of urgency again”, said Subadra Rajappa, head of U.S. rates strategy at Societe Generale.Yields, which move inversely to prices, are up from 1.79% at the beginning of February. The last time they breached 2% was August 2019.”I would say the chances of yields continuing to go higher are pretty high,” said Gargi Chaudhuri, Head of iShares Investment Strategy, Americas, at BlackRock, speaking ahead of the data.FOREIGN COMPETITIONCompetition in other markets for yield may be sapping demand for Treasuries and helping push yields higher, Chaudhuri said.A second rate hike by the Bank of England last week, and expectations of faster policy tightening by the European Central Bank (ECB), added to U.S. bonds’ weakness, with borrowing costs in Europe – as well as Japanese government bond yields – having jumped to multi-year highs in recent days. read more “Investors have these other markets to gravitate towards that they didn’t in the past, and that will require investors that are focusing on U.S. markets to seek a higher term premium and therefore will impact yields higher,” Chaudhuri said.Japan’s benchmark 10-year government bond yield is around its highest level since January 2016 at 0.220% while Germany’s 10-year government bond yield , at 0.255%, is at its highest since January 2019. read more FEDFEDFor Kelsey Berro, fixed income portfolio manager at J.P. Morgan Asset Management, the level of yields in overseas markets such as Japan or Germany have made U.S. rates comparably more attractive, preventing a sustainable sell off, but that is expected to change.”Already you should start to see that some of these foreign investors take a second look at their home countries rather than reaching for yields in the U.S.,” she said.Still, there was strong demand seen for a recent 10-year Treasury auction, although it was unclear how much overseas bidders participated. SPEEDY ASCENTThe rise in US yields has come faster than many anticipated: In December, a Reuters poll forecast that 10-year note yields would rise to around 2% towards the end of 2022 – a level it has reached in the first couple of months. read more Some banks have been updating that view. Goldman Sachs analysts on Wednesday raised their forecast for the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield to 2.25% by end-2022, from a previous year-end target of 2%.The pace of gains has caused volatility in other assets. U.S. equities have been rocky this year, with shares of tech companies particularly volatile, as expectations of higher yields threaten to erode the value of their future earnings.Gene Podkaminer, Head of Research for Franklin Templeton Investment Solutions, called 2% on the benchmark 10-year a “psychological” level that could make U.S. government bonds more attractive versus other assets, such as volatile stocks.”When you start getting close to 2% … all of a sudden Treasuries are looking more appealing,” Podkaminer said earlier this week.One commonly cited metric still favors stocks, however.The equity risk premium – or the extra return investors receive for holding stocks over risk-free government bonds – favors equities over the next year, Keith Lerner, co-chief investment officer at Truist Advisory Services, said on Wednesday.The S&P 500 has historically beaten the one-year return for the 10-year Treasury note by an average of 11.8% when the premium stood at Wednesday’s level of 260 points, Lerner said.“I don’t think the U.S. 10-year yield hitting 2% would have a big impact on the stock markets per se,” said Manish Kabra, head of U.S. equity strategy at Societe Generale, citing the equity risk premium.However, “we could see some pressure if yields go to 2.5%,” she said.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterReporting by Davide Barbuscia; additional reporting by Saikat Chatterjee in London and Lewis Krauskopf in New York; editing by Ira Iosebashvili and Megan DaviesOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. .