Summit Materials makes $3.8 billion rival bid for Ash Grove Cement: source

Reuters  |  DUBLIN/LONDON 

By Padraic Halpin and Pamela Barbaglia

DUBLIN/(Reuters) - Summit Materials, U.S. construction firm set up by former executives, has made rival offer for Cement, which has agreed to pay $3.5 billion for, source said.

said on Friday it had received bid valued at $3.7-$3.8 billion which it expects to result in better offer to the deal struck last month with CRH, the world's third-largest building materials supplier.

source familiar with the matter said the unnamed bidder was Summit and it had submitted its bid on Thursday. The offer is being considered by Grove's board, the source added.

Summit said it does not comment on market rumours or speculation. Ireland's said that its proposal remains in place, subject to approval from shareholders.

Shares in were down 2.1 percent at 30.85 euros at 1500 GMT while Summit was 2.0 percent lower at $32.00.

has set meeting on Nov. 1 for shareholders to vote on the agreement with CRH, which its board unanimously approved last month, but has extended the period during which it can look for other potential buyers to Oct. 20, the company said in statement.

Prior to setting up fast-growing Summit in 2009, the Denver materials group's chief executive Thomas Hill headed up CRH's North American arm and went on to poach number of other senior U.S.-based executives.

Summit's bid would surpass its own value of $3.65 billion. CRH, which has market capitalisation of $26.3 billion and said last month that it had around 5 billion euros available to spend on acquisitions over the next 18-24 months, made an all-cash bid.

is also Grove's largest customer and would be owed $131 million termination fee if the Kansas-based company sells to another party.

"Summit Materials' opportunistic offer of an merger will likely see investors decide between cash offer at 60 percent premium or merger that gives no certainty to cash exit price for large investors," said Darren McKinley, analyst at Dublin-based Merrion Stockbrokers.

"Given CRH's position as Grove's largest customer, they are well placed to determine whether higher offer makes sense or whether to let shareholders decide whether they want cash in hand now or to merge with company that currently doesn't pay dividend."

(Additional reporting by Kanishka Singh and Conor Humphries; Editing by Alexander Smith and Elaine Hardcastle)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, October 06 2017. 21:01 IST