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Agrium? Vitterra!

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    Agrium? Vitterra!

    Agricultural retailer Agrium is being
    cited as a potential player in the
    Viterra takeover, with analysts calling
    the Calgary-based company a logical fit
    for any deal.

    "Agrium would love to have Viterra's
    agri-business," PI Financial analyst
    Jason Zandberg said.

    Agrium's Richard Downey said Tuesday the
    company is "declining to comment on
    speculation or rumours."

    Viterra, whose executives are based in
    Calgary, said last week it had received
    expressions of interest from third
    parties, opening the door to unnamed
    sources expressing the interest of
    various companies.

    Reports have named Swiss Glen-core as a
    bidder, as well as Cargill. Other
    industry players have also been tossed
    in the mix, but no one has confirmed
    they are interested in making an offer.

    Agrium, which owns agricultural retail
    outlets and produces fertilizer, would
    have an interest in Vi-terra's 261
    retail stores in Western Canada, Joel
    Jackson of BMO Capital Markets wrote in
    a report. Agrium has 75 retail stores in
    the Prairies, and both companies have
    outlets in Australia.

    "We expect (Agrium) to be a potential
    suitor for Viterra's agri-products
    division, as the acquisition is a match
    on many levels" for Agrium, he wrote,
    adding that should Agrium enter the
    race, it would be unlikely to want the
    grain-handling portion of Viterra's
    business.

    "So (Agrium) would either bid just for
    the agri-products piece or sell off the
    grain-handling business, similar to what
    transpired after its acquisition of the
    AWB."

    When Agrium bought the former Australian
    Wheat Board in 2010, it retained the
    retail arm and sold grain-handling to
    Cargill.

    Zandberg said that lends credence to an
    Agrium-Cargill deal.

    "They teamed up together in Australia to
    do a similar sort of deal," he said.

    However, Agrium could also give a
    foreign company interested in Viterra a
    Canadian component, Zandberg added.

    Viterra's size - a sale price has been
    pegged around $5.5 billion - means the
    federal government must review a foreign
    takeover to determine if there's a "net
    benefit" to the country, and any deal
    would be scrutinized by the Competition
    Bureau.

    In 2010, the government blocked BHP
    Billiton's bid to buy Potash Corp. of
    Saskatchewan.

    Read more:
    http://www.calgaryherald.com/business/ch
    anges expected agricultural retail secto
    r/6298554/story.html#ixzz1p64C6Sbe

    #2
    Well I guess we will be organic farmers
    after all. I imagine that such a deal
    would involve some margin fattening on the
    inputs retail side.

    Comment


      #3
      Agrium owns CPS in this area and many others so I would think the competition bureau would review that purchase and it may have trouble passing the test when you look at what Agrium owns or a percentage interest in.

      Comment


        #4
        The Comedian gobermont can't tell its own
        a hole from a hole in the ground. Man wes
        open fer business. I say sell it all, as
        fast as ya kin ta the highest bidder.
        Money talks, bullsh t walks. Open markets
        rule, the rich get richer. Thats what
        this is all abooot ain't it!!

        Comment


          #5
          Sale details if there will even be one are not given to shareholders yet. Glencore is a publicly traded company also traded on the american exchange so a buyout could involve Cash only, cash plus shares in new company, etc.
          I for one would like Viterra to counter the Glencore deal with the creation of Glencore shares with equal rights of the GLCNF shares. Traded on the TSX. So in that way Gencore and Viterra actually become more like a merged company.

          Comment


            #6
            If we could create 2 Glencore shares for every 1 Viterra share, traded at the moment at 6.49 per share looks pretty attractive to me. Actually amounts to less than the cash deal but could offer Viterra shareholders a lot of advantages. I wonder if the CEO and COO etc have thought of that?

            Comment


              #7
              •In Australia, Paraguay, Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan, Glencore farms 270,000 hectares of owned or leased land

              Comment

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