The company logo is displayed outside the Pearson offices in London August 4, 2017. — Reuters pic
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LONDON, March 30 — Education group Pearson said today it had rejected a third takeover offer from Apollo, valuing it at £6.7 billion (RM36 billion), prompting the US investment company to walk away and sending its shares down 12 per cent.
Pearson revealed earlier this month that it had rejected two takeover approaches from Apollo, sending its shares up 22 per cent on the day.
The second proposal valued each Pearson share at 854.2 pence while the third offer came in at 884.2 pence. Pearson shares were trading at 697 pence at 0950 GMT today.
“The board of Pearson considered the third proposal, together with its financial and legal advisers, and concluded that it significantly undervalued the company and its future prospects,” it said in a statement.
“Accordingly, the board of Pearson unanimously rejected the third proposal.”
Pearson’s decision to dismiss a takeover, after it spent seven years navigating the difficult switch from traditional learning to online, will put even more focus on boss Andy Bird, and whether his new strategy can work.
Bird has lately sharpened Pearson’s focus to sell directly to consumers and not just schools, colleges or shops, while also expanding into the workforce training sector with recent acquisitions.
The company recently set medium-term targets for the first time in six years, believing it has turned the corner after changes in the industry hit its once thriving US higher education courseware business, leading to a string of profit warnings. — Reuters
2024-11-08 01:12:17