The offers on Zenitel and Sioen allow investors to skim the horizon to other possible prey on the Brussels stock exchange.
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A takeover bid may come out of the blue for any company, but some constants stand out for family businesses that are being taken off the stock exchange. These are usually healthy companies where debts are under control, which in recent years did not rely on the stock exchange as a source of financing, which are relatively cheap and where the forecasts for the results are favorable. They also often have little regard for contacts with investors or the press.
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The families know their company best and prefer not to pay crazy prices. The Moortgats, for example, managed to delete the brewer Duvel and the Macharis family the cardboard maker VPK in 2013 before both embarked on a significant expansion. Pairi Daiza fiddled with its depreciation methods to dampen the results the year before the delisting. After the stock exchange exit, the visitor figures rose spectacularly thanks to substantial investments. Although there are always exceptions: the timing of Marc Saverys with his bid for the shipping group CMB was not so happy. Afterwards, the shipping rates fell. In shipping, as a shipping company you simply have no control over international prices.
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There is no synergy premium in the case of delisting by the family. A buyer from the same sector can put more money on the table because he can also factor in cost savings or other synergies, such as better purchasing conditions, in his price. Bids by controlling shareholders are therefore slightly more meager.