Higher price for Anheuser not a sure thing
By Martinne Geller
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Anheuser-Busch Cos Inc (BUD.N: Quote, Profile, Research) may play hard to get in coming weeks as Belgian-Brazilian suitor InBev seeks to woo it with a $46.3 billion bid, but few see it being able to spurn the proposal outright.
Analysts say the U.S. brewer's best option is to persuade InBev to cough up more than the $65 a share now on the table, even if that requires shrewd tactics like threatening to do side deals that would make it a less attractive target.
But finding a real alternative that works for Anheuser shareholders is unlikely given the slow growth of the U.S. beer market, the founding family's small stake, and the brewer's weak performance.
"After sufficient bobbing and weaving, saying 'yes' will relieve him (Anheuser CEO August Busch IV) of his burden," said Tom Pirko, president of Bevmark, a Santa Barbara, California-based advisory firm.
He said Busch, who was named to lead Anheuser in 2006 and is struggling to turn it around, will likely concede to InBev, despite prior proclamations to the contrary. InBev is the world's No. 2 brewer with brands such as Stella Artois and Beck's.
Pirko, who said he has worked with Anheuser, guessed that the maker of Budweiser beers will push for $68 or $70 per share. He said it could probably ask as much as $75 per share before InBev would walk away from a deal.
Anheuser, whose shares closed up 5.2 percent on Thursday at $61.40, said it would review the proposal and decide in due course.
An arbitrageur who declined to be named forecast a deal would eventually be done at $70 or more. Continued...
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