Smurfit Kappa shares rise again as board reaffirms bid rejection

Shares in packaging giant rise more than 6 per cent to €36 after approach from US rival

Smurfit Kappa chief executive Tony Smurfit. The paper packaging firm described the rejected International Paper bid as a “highly opportunistic proposal”. Photograph: Brenda Fitzsimons
Smurfit Kappa chief executive Tony Smurfit. The paper packaging firm described the rejected International Paper bid as a “highly opportunistic proposal”. Photograph: Brenda Fitzsimons

Paper packaging firm Smurfit Kappa rose again in trading in Dublin on Wednesday though the stock was trading below the level of the rejected International Paper bid in mid-afternoon.

The shares were 6.4 per cent higher on the day after the Irish group’s board reaffirmed its rejection of a takeover offer from its US rival which valued the group at €8.6 billion.

International Paper offered €22 in cash and 0.3028 new International Paper share for each Smurfit share.

Shares in the Irish company, which surged more than 18 per cent on Tuesday after it flagged the approach, rose to a record €36.40 shortly after stock markets opened on Wednesday. They later pulled back slightly and were trading at a level that valued the company at €8.55 billion, slightly below the value of the International Paper offer.

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‘Highly opportunistic’

“Smurfit Kappa notes the announcement released by International Paper company setting out the price of the unsolicited and highly opportunistic proposal . . . Shareholders are strongly advised to take no action,” Smurfit Kappa said in a statement.

“The board of Smurfit Kappa has already carefully considered, with its financial advisers, the proposal in detail and has unanimously rejected it on the basis that it fails entirely to reflect the group’s superior prospects as an independent business and represents a valuation multiple significantly below recent comparable transactions,” the statement said.

It added there could be no certainty that any firm offer would be made, nor any certainty as to the terms on which any firm offer might be made by International Paper.

International Paper said it remained ready to engage with Smurfit’s board and shareholders to discuss both the merits of its bid and the reasons why “it believes it provides the best near- and long-term value for Smurfit Kappa shareholders.”

Smurfit Kappa , which operates in 35 countries in Europe and the Americas, recorded a slight rise in full-year earnings to €1.24 billion last year after a strong fourth quarter. It said on Tuesday that the underlying positive trading conditions had continued into 2018.

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy is Economics Correspondent of The Irish Times