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Herman Miller to Buy Knoll for $1.8 Billion in Workplace Bet

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Elizabeth Elkin
·1 min read
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(Bloomberg) -- Office-furniture company Herman Miller Inc. agreed to acquire rival Knoll Inc. for $1.8 billion, moving to take advantage of workplace renovations and restructurings as the pandemic eases.

The companies said the combination would help them feed into the transformation of home and office as work continues to be split between the two.

“As distributed working models become the new normal for companies, businesses are reimagining the office to foster collaboration, culture and focused work, while supporting a growing remote employee base,” Herman Miller Chief Executive Officer Andi Owen said in a statement Monday. “At the same time, consumers are making significant investments in their homes.”

Knoll shareholders will receive $11 in cash and 0.32 of a Herman Miller share for each Knoll share, or $24.18 a share based on Herman Miller’s April 16 closing price. Knoll Chairman and CEO Andrew Cogan will step down when the transaction closes, and Owen will be president and CEO of the combined company.

Knoll surged as much as 35% to $23.23 in New York trading. Herman Miller fell more than 12% to $38.77.

The companies said they see the merger generating $100 million of run-rate cost savings within two years of closing, which they expect by the end of the third quarter.

(Updates with per-share deal value in fourth paragraph.)

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