Word: pontes
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...contest for control of Conoco, the energy company laden with 1.7 billion bbl. of oil reserves, 3.8 trillion cu. ft. of natural gas and 14.3 billion tons of coal, whirled on last week at a billion-dollar pace. The opponents: Du Pont, the largest U.S. chemical producer; Seagram, the world's biggest liquor distiller; Mobil, the second largest American petroleum company; and Texaco, the third-ranking oil firm. As the price for Conoco whirled higher and higher, the contestants launched a global financial free-for-all and corralled almost $20 billion in standby credit at multinational banks from...
...weeks ago, Conoco revealed that Du Pont was its choice as a partner. After five days of frantic negotiations capped by a midnight meeting on July 5 between Conoco Chairman Ralph Bailey and Du Pont Chairman Edward Jefferson, the two companies agreed to merge. Jefferson offered $7.3 billion, or an average price of $84.20 per Conoco share. The deal seemed to save Conoco from an unwelcome takeover bid from Canada's Seagram, which had offered $73 per share for about 41% of the oil company's stock. Conoco had also spurned an $85-per-share bid from Texaco...
Instead of ending the affair, however, the Du Pont-Conoco merger announcement merely unleashed a new flurry of financial maneuvering. Within four days, Texaco quietly arranged $5.5 billion in credit from a group of banks led by Chase Manhattan. Pundits speculated that Texaco was gearing up to boost its bid for Conoco or pursue another oil company. Meanwhile Edgar Bronfman, Seagram's tenacious chairman, was mulling his own countermove. He called his board of directors into a special session. The verdict: up the ante. The new offer: $85 per share for 51% of Conoco stock...
...Pont's top officers immediately huddled at their Wilmington, Del., headquarters to size up the new Seagram challenge. During a marathon session in the walnut-paneled executive committee room, Chairman Jefferson exhorted his troops: "Du Pont is a strong company, and we're going into this thing...
Rather than wait for Mobil's move, Du Pont launched a pre-emptive strike. Chairman Jefferson called Conoco's Bailey with a sweetened offer: $7.6 billion, or $86.19 per Conoco share. At the same time, Du Pont went back to its banks to boost its line of credit from $3 billion to $4 billion in case it needed more money to capture Conoco...