Answer : Tata Corus acquisition
On 20 October 2006 the board of
directors of Anglo-Dutch steelmaker Corus accepted a $7.6 billion takeover bid
from Tata Steel, the Indian steel company, at 455 pence per share of Corus. The
following months saw a lot of negotiations from both sides of the deal. Tata
Steel's bid to acquire Corus Group was challenged by CSN, the Brazilian steel
maker. Finally, on January 30, 2007, Tata Steel purchased a 100% stake in the
Corus Group at 608 pence per share in an all cash deal, cumulatively valued at
USD 12.04 Billion. The deal is the largest Indian takeover of a foreign company
and made Tata Steel the world's fifth-largest steel group.
The
involved companies
'Tata Steel', formerly known as TISCO
(Tata Iron and Steel Company Limited), was the world's 56th largest and India's
2nd largest steel company with an annual crude steel capacity of 3.8 million
tonnes. It is based in Jamshedpur, Jharkhand, India.[1][2] It is part of the
Tata Group of companies. Post Corus merger, Tata Steel is India's
second-largest and second-most profitable company in private sector with
consolidated revenues of Rs 1,32,110 crore and net profit of over Rs 12,350
crore during the year ended March 31, 2008.[3][4]. The company was also
recognized as the world's best steel producer by World Steel Dynamics in 2005.
The company is listed on BSE and NSE; and employs about 82,700 people (as of
2007).
Corus was formed from the merger of Koninklijke
Hoogovens N.V. with British Steel Plc on 6 October 1999. It has major
integrated steel plants at Port Talbot, South Wales; Scunthorpe, North
Lincolnshire; Teesside, Cleveland (all in the United Kingdom) and IJmuiden in
the Netherlands. It also has rolling mills situated
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