Do More With Reuters
Partner Services

Cisco faces fresh call to raise Tandberg bid

Fri Nov 6, 2009 8:01pm IST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

By Quentin Webb

LONDON (Reuters) - Advisers to a small band of shareholders in Norwegian video conferencing company Tandberg ASA added their voices to calls for suitor Cisco Systems Inc to up its $3 billion bid, ahead of a Monday offer deadline.

Cisco has made its offer for Tandberg -- its first attempt at a European public takeover -- conditional on 90 percent acceptance.

However, the network equipment maker has run into resistance from roughly 30 percent of Tandberg shareholders. Some previous Scandinavian takeover tussles, such as the purchase of Gambro in 2006, have resulted in higher offers being made.

Tandberg shares were little changed at 152.20 Norwegian crowns ($26.70), up 0.79 percent but below the 153.50 crowns offer price. The stock traded as high as 159.20 crowns in October, on hopes of a higher offer.

In an open letter published on the website of Panta Capital, a small London firm advising on merger arbitrage, it and Zurich-based Scott & Associates AG said the offer did not represent a real premium to market value, as measured by peer valuation, historical trading, or operational performance.

A higher price "taking into account its growth profile and the substantial scope for sales and cost synergies, is not in conflict with Cisco's respect of the principles of prudence and financial fairness," the firms wrote, responding to an earlier blog post by a Cisco official.

In a telephone interview, Peter Germonpre of Panta Capital told Reuters a fair value would be at least 170 Norwegian crowns. He said the two firms represented European individual investors holding less than 1 percent of Tandberg stock.

A Nov. 3 Reuters poll of 14 analysts found 12 believed the current offer would not win 90 percent approval.   Continued...

Reuters correspondent Sourav Mishra recounts the unforgettable night of Nov. 26 at Mumbai's Leopold Cafe
Back from the Dead
REUTERS WITNESS - 26/11

Reuters correspondent Sourav Mishra recounts the night of Nov. 26 at Leopold Cafe.  Full Article | Full Coverage 

editor's choice

Cross-post
Cross-post

LinkedIn and Twitter have linked up.  Full Article 

Big Opportunity
Big Opportunity

Nokia sees enormous potential in mobile money.  Full Article 

 
High Stakes
High Stakes

HP-3Com deal raises stakes in tech M&A battle.  Full Article 

Spending Freeze
Spending Freeze

Japan's freeze on supercomputers marks end of era.  Full Article 

 

REUTERS WEEKEND

9: Michael Lee-Chin Crystal, Royal Ontario Museum; Toronto. What I.M. Pei’s pyramid is to the Louvre, so is the relatively new Michael Lee-Chin Crystal to the Royal Ontario Museum. While many praise the glass structure, just as many are troubled by the incongruity to the original, more traditional museum that still sits directly beside it.  REUTERS/Yan Sun/Handout
Travel Picks

World's top 10 ugliest buildings.  Full Article | Slideshow 

Revellers dance at an office Christmas party in London December 13, 2007.  REUTERS/Finbarr O'Reilly
Travel Picks

Top 10 cities to party the night away.  Full Article 

 
Talk show host Oprah Winfrey waves to people at the Main Street in Copenhagen in this September 30, 2009 file photo. REUTERS/Scanpix/Jeppe Michael Jensen/Files
End of Oprah?

Winfrey says ending TV show "feels right."  Full Article | Slideshow 

Dresses worn by actress Audrey Hepburn are displayed at a press preview of the Tanja Star-Busman collection of Hepburn memorabilia at Sotheby's in New York November 20, 2009.  REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
Hepburn Auction

Audrey Hepburn's dresses will be sold at auction.  Full Article 

 
Photo
One Year Later

A look back at the events of 26/11 ahead of the first anniversary of the militant attacks in Mumbai that killed 166 people.  Slideshow | Full Coverage 

Photo
Ageing Santa gets $100,000 facelift for Christmas Friday, 20 Nov 2009 

WELLINGTON (Reuters) - A Santa in New Zealand with a droopy eye has received a NZ$100,000 ($74,000) face-lift in the run-up to Christmas so that his aging face does not scare children.  Full Article