Monsanto sweetens Syngenta play with $2B break fee

By 
Reuters
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: June 8, 2015

, ,

(Syngenta.com)

New York | Reuters –– U.S. seed and ag chem firm Monsanto has offered to pay a US$2 billion reverse break-up fee to Syngenta if it can’t obtain global regulatory approvals for an acquisition, it said in a statement on Sunday.

The move, under which Monsanto would pay the fee if regulators reject the proposal, is the latest step in a bid by the world’s largest seed company to take over its Swiss rival. Syngenta had earlier rejected a US$45 billion offer, but St. Louis-based Monsanto has continued to pursue a deal.

Read Also

Monsanto sweetens Syngenta play with $2B break fee

USDA attachés forecast some changes in China’s oilseeds, cereals

As China heads into the 2026/27 marketing year, the United States Department of Agriculture attachés in Beijing projected a few minor to moderate changes in the country’s soybean, canola, corn and wheat crops.

Most recently, Monsanto and its advisers were said to be working to accommodate Syngenta’s worries over regulatory hurdles, though a source close to Syngenta indicated a deal may not happen.

Monsanto CEO Hugh Grant said in the statement it’s “disappointing” Syngenta hasn’t engaged in substantive talks about the deal, but the company remains committed to “unlocking the opportunity of this combination” and pursuing discussions with Syngenta’s management and board.

A takeover would create a combined entity with control of more than 40 per cent of the U.S. seed market. Syngenta expects regulators to consider the combined group’s control in the broader agricultural inputs market, people with knowledge of the industry previously said.

Reporting for Reuters by Catherine Ngai in New York.

explore

Stories from our other publications