Popular Articles

Mittal's open offer for Uttam Galva to begin on December 19
ArcelorMittal’s open offer to acquire a 29.39 percent stake in Uttam Galva Steels will begin on December 19. The open offer will close on January 7, SBI Capital Markets said in a statement to the Bombay Stock Exchange.

Excise duty uppercuts software firms
Windows 7, Adobe, Symantec software stuck at customs over excise duty

News of the day

RBI gives positive signal to economy: Fin Secy
The Finance Ministry today said the RBI"s move to retain almost all key rates unchanged will give a positive signal to the economy, which is on the path of recovery.
Management

Kraft to raise 7 bn pound via bonds to fund Cadbury buy

The US confectionery giant Kraft is preparing to tap the bond markets to raise as much as 7 billion pounds to help finance its 11.9 billion pound takeover of the British chocolate maker Cadbury, say media reports. - Splitting the difference - Hershey says will not make bid for Cadbury - After a robust 2009, India Inc start "10 with Rs 5,800 cr QIPs - Yes Bank plans to raise $150-200 mn via QIP - Cadbury accepts $19.7bn Kraft offer - Chocoholic "The American food giant Kraft is preparing to tap the bond markets to help finance its 11.9-billion pounds takeover of Cadbury," the Sunday Times said. Kraft is drawing up plans to launch a "7-billion pound bond issue to re-finance a short-term bridging loan provided by a consortium of investment banks including Deutsche and Citi". Saying that no formal decision has been made to press ahead, the newspaper said quoting sources that Kraft is likely to launch the mammoth bond issue within weeks. The issue would take advantage of low interest rates and strong investor appetite for corporate bonds. The proceeds would replace the bridging loans that typically have a much higher interest rate. Kraft had, in fact, highlighted the possibility of a bond issue in its formal offer documents released last week. Meanwhile, Cadbury Chairman Roger Carr claimed over the weekend that Kraft could have bought the confectionery giant for 50 pence a share less if it had pressed ahead with an 800 pence-a-share hostile offer before Christmas. "If Kraft had moved faster, I believe it may have succeeded at an even lower price. Everything we were hearing from the hedge-fund community was that as long as it has an 8 in front of it, Kraft gets it," Carr said.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):