Word: alcoa
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...Alcoa...
Instead of investigating the offer to see if it was in the stockholders' interest, Portal signed a secret deal with Alcoa. He assured Alcoa that the only remaining problem-getting British Treasury approval of a deal involving a nonresident company-was certain to be decided favorably in a few days...
Tube-Reynolds brought the fight out into the open by calling in the press to explain its attractive offer. For two shares of Aluminium the new group would pay $10.92 in cash, plus a share of Tube stock worth $11.62-an average of $11.27 vthe $8.40 offer from Alcoa. To a hurriedly called press conference, Lord Portal lamely explained that he had ignored the much higher Tube-Reynolds offer because an Alcoa deal was in the "longterm interests of the company." But he conceded that his real fear was that the "Reynolds family," led by Reynolds President Richard Reynolds...
...buying more shares. The banks said they would pay $11.48 a share for one-half of each stockholder's holdings if he would keep the rest three months, i.e., until the fight was over. This only made stockholders madder, since it showed that the original price to Alcoa had been much...
...London's City predicted that the Treasury would quickly approve the Tube-Reynolds takeover, Alcoa in Pittsburgh tersely gave notice that it had "no further interest" in the matter. Privately, Alcoa officials fumed that the Aluminium management had led them down the garden path by airily assuring Alcoa that Treasury approval was routine. The worst of it was that once Alcoa had signed the $8.40 agreement, it could not go into the market and offer more without making the $8.40 look bad. To top off Alcoa's unhappiness, its chief competitor had a major European affiliate; Alcoa...