Home Estate Planning Rightmove rejects fourth REA bid as ‘unattractive and undervaluing’ firm

Rightmove rejects fourth REA bid as ‘unattractive and undervaluing’ firm

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Property platform Rightmove has rejected the fourth takeover offer from Rupert Mudroch’s REA.

After rejecting REA’s third offer for “materially undervaluing” the company, London-listed Rightmove has said the £6.2bn offer “remains unattractive”. 

“The board has unanimously concluded that the latest proposal is unattractive and materially undervalues Rightmove,” the company said. “Shareholder interests would be better served through the execution of Rightmove’s standalone strategic plan.”

Rightmove also declined REA an extension to its 30 September ‘put up or shut up’ deadline, as well as access to due diligence as “none of REA’s proposals received to date has been at a sufficient level to grant such access”.

Chair Andrew Fisher called the series of bids “very disruptive, as well as unsettling for our colleagues”. 

REA has a final deadline of 5pm this evening (30 September) to put forward a bid for the property portal. REA’s boss Owen Wilson said it “continues to see the potential for [REA] to strengthen Rightmove and accelerate its growth.” 

Rightmove also rebuffed claims from Wilson that it has “refused to meet with” REA.

It said that the company has “taken every phone call that REA has made since its interest was first made public, with a level of engagement which in Rightmove’s view is customary and appropriate in the context of an unsolicited and unilateral series of approaches”.

Analysts and commentators have been split over the potential deal, with some former detractors urging Rightmove to accept the recent higher bid. 

Phil King, the chief investment officer of Regal Partners, which holds stakes in both Rightmove and REA, said last week: “In our view [Rightmove] don’t appreciate the upside to the REA share price if the deal is successful and the downside to the Rightmove share price if the offer is withdrawn.”

“I commend the Rightmove board for rejecting the initial lowball offers,” Doug Tynan, chief investment officer of GCQ told the Australian Financial Review after the fourth bid for Rightmove. 

“However, the revised £7.70 proposal demonstrates the seriousness of REA’s intent and as a consequence, we are at the point where it is in shareholders’ interests for the board to engage with REA,” he added.

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