Nasdaq and Borse Dubai may Join Hands in OMX bid
US exchange company Nasdaq may sell its stake in the London Stock Exchange to Borse Dubai and make a joint bid with the Gulf exchange for Nordic exchange owner OMX, The Daily Telegraph said on Monday.
Nasdaq Stock Market, eager to expand its presence in overseas markets, is now locked in a $4 billion bidding war with Borse Dubai for OMX, which owns exchanges in Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Iceland and the Baltic states.
On August 20, Nasdaq said it may sell its 31 percent LSE stake, worth around 800 million pounds ($1.6 billion), to bolster its chances of buying OMX and that it was already in touch with interested parties. It said then it would not sell the stake to a single buyer.
"I think Dubai have a very strong hand to take some terms or at least be included in the council," the paper quoted a source as saying.
Nasdaq's agreed $3.7 billion deal with OMX has been trumped by a $4 billion cash proposal by Borse Dubai. Nasdaq chief executive Bob Greifeld, wary of losing the battle for OMX or paying too much, is expected to come back with another bid close to $4 billion, the paper said.
Nasdaq wants to use the proceeds from the sale of its LSE stake to pay down debt and buy back shares, which would effectively raise the value of its cash-and-share bid for OMX.
Nasdaq and Borse Dubai could not be immediately reached for comment. - Reuters
Nasdaq Stock Market, eager to expand its presence in overseas markets, is now locked in a $4 billion bidding war with Borse Dubai for OMX, which owns exchanges in Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Iceland and the Baltic states.
On August 20, Nasdaq said it may sell its 31 percent LSE stake, worth around 800 million pounds ($1.6 billion), to bolster its chances of buying OMX and that it was already in touch with interested parties. It said then it would not sell the stake to a single buyer.
"I think Dubai have a very strong hand to take some terms or at least be included in the council," the paper quoted a source as saying.
Nasdaq's agreed $3.7 billion deal with OMX has been trumped by a $4 billion cash proposal by Borse Dubai. Nasdaq chief executive Bob Greifeld, wary of losing the battle for OMX or paying too much, is expected to come back with another bid close to $4 billion, the paper said.
Nasdaq wants to use the proceeds from the sale of its LSE stake to pay down debt and buy back shares, which would effectively raise the value of its cash-and-share bid for OMX.
Nasdaq and Borse Dubai could not be immediately reached for comment. - Reuters
Labels: Borse Dubai, Dubai
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