Oh, well. Another suitor bites the dust. Romeo, oh Romeo, wherefore art thou, Romeo?Agfa-Gevaert chief financial officer Kris Hoornaert has been forced to deny rumours that the company has received an offer from Dutch electronics company Philips.
Hoornaert spoke out yesterday after Agfa's share price leapt 39% to €5.65 (£4.50), following rumours that Philips might make a €9 per share offer for the Belgian company.
"Agfa-Gevaert does not know of any acquisition proposal. We are very shocked. We have not received anything in the form of a communication or piece of news," said Hoornaert.
Shares fell somewhat following Hoornaert's statement, but still closed up 24.5% at €5.06.
The news follows Agfa's appointment, in April, of German-based investment bank Lazard to conduct a strategic review of its operations, after a planned demerger of the company's three division – Graphics, Healthcare and Materials – fell through.
Agfa blamed the demerger's indefinite postponement on disappointing results, which also spurred a massive drop in its share price over the past 12 months – down 77% from a high of €19.10 to a low of €4.38.
PACS:
1. n. (acronym) Picture Archiving and Communications System.
A device or group of devices and associated network components designed to store and retrieve medical images.
2. n. (acronym) Pain And Constant Suffering.
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
"i" Is For "iSite"
. . . and not IMPAX
It looks like Philips isn't interested in Agfa after all. From printweek.com's Simon Nias:
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