
Sainsbury's opened its books to Delta Two last month
The
Qatari-based investment firm hoping to takeover Sainsbury's has agreed
to seek additional funding to finance an offer for the supermarket
group.
In a statement today Sainsbury's revealed that Delta Two
had agreed to secured additional equity of approximately £500 million
in respect of its proposed acquisition of the retailer.
Confirmation
that Delta Two is seeking extra funds to finance its proposed
600p-a-share offer for the company comes amid reports that the
Sainsbury's family – who retain a stake in the retailer – are concerned
that their prospective bid is comprised of too much debt.
The
issue is particularly pertinent given the ongoing turmoil in the
world's credit markets which has been prompted by problems in the US
housing sector.
Sainsbury's revealed that Delta Two had entered
into discussions with the Qatar Investment Authority to secure the
additional funding it has agreed to find in respect of an offer for the
supermarket chain.
But the retailer, which turned down a private
equity bid led by CVC in the spring, stressed: "There can be no
certainty that such funding will be forthcoming and, therefore, no
certainty that an offer will be made."
Meanwhile the UK's
takeover watchdog has ruled that Delta Two must table a formal bid for
Sainsbury's by November 8th, or else end its interest in the company.
Sainsbury's
announced that it had agreed to open its books to the investment firm
last month, with the retailer stressing that under Delta Two's
ownership its business would see "significant investment and further
expansion".
If a deal is reached between Delta Two and
Sainsbury's, the former deputy chief executive of rival supermarket
group Asda – Tony Campbell – would become the retailer's non-executive
chairman.
