Public Relations

JP Morgan, BofA gear up to fund Hershey's Cadbury bid

Two global lenders--JP Morgan and Bank of America (BofA) are preparing to lend US chocolate maker Hershey about $7 billion to bid for British confectionery major Cadbury, says a media report. - XLRI gets Rs 5 lakh highest offer for global summer intern - A balancing act - Positive outlook on investment in India, says survey - BofA shareholder opposes insiders as CEO candidates - Welspun-Gujarat upsizes FCCB issue to $150 mn - BofA narrows list for CEO post: Report "JP Morgan and Bank of America are preparing to lend Hershey about $7 billion (4.2 billion pounds) to help it enter a bidding war for Cadbury," The Telegraph reported. Hershey is said to be working on plans to launch a possible 10.3 billion pounds offer for the UK chocolate company. The report said that Hershey"s potential bid would comprise 6.1 billion pounds in cash and 1.2 billion pounds in shares, plus a cash injection of up to 3 billion pounds from the US chocolate maker"s American investors. Hershey would try to make approach the US food major after details Kraft"s USD 16.2 billion offer are disclosed. The daily said, Kraft must post its offer document by December 7. However it is expected that Kraft will post the document ahead of schedule this week. Attributing to Cadbury Chief Executive Todd Stitzer, the report said, Stitzer has indicated support for a possible tie-up with Hershey, rather than Kraft. "I would prefer Cadbury to be in an environment where its values and principles could continue," the report said citing Stitzer.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Unions against taxing savings schemes on withdrawal
The central trade unions would press for shelving a proposal that wants to tax withdrawals from savings schemes, including provident funds, at the pre-Budget meeting with Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee on January 14.
Popular Articles
payday loans online

Nava Bharat soars on acquiring 65% Zambian coal mine
The stock soared to a high of Rs 429 and finally ended at Rs 421, up 5.5% from its previous close. The counter clocked volumes of 323,029 shares as compared to the two-week daily average traded volumes of 20,162 shares on the BSE. _________________________________________
Polygraphy
Jonathan Weil: Banks have the world flying blind on depth of losses
There was a stunning omission from the government’s latest list of “problem” banks, which ran to 416 lenders, a 15-year high, as of June 30. One outfit not on the list was Georgian Bank, the second-largest Atlanta-based bank, which supposedly had plenty of capital. It failed last week.