Michele Maatouk Sharecast News
23 Oct, 2024 14:27 23 Oct, 2024 16:29

Frasers abandons pursuit of Mulberry, shares slump

dl mulberry fashion luxury brand label 3
MulberrySharecast / public domain image

Mike Ashley’s Frasers Group said on Wednesday that it was abandoning its pursuit of luxury handbag maker Mulberry.

Frasers Group

795.50p

17:00 23/10/24
-1.79%
-14.50p

FTSE 100

8,258.64

16:44 23/10/24
n/a
n/a

FTSE 350

4,557.60

17:14 23/10/24
n/a
n/a

FTSE AIM All-Share

729.13

17:09 23/10/24
n/a
n/a

FTSE All-Share

4,514.21

17:09 23/10/24
n/a
n/a

General Retailers

4,396.18

17:15 23/10/24
0.85%
36.84

Mulberry Group

110.00p

16:35 23/10/24
-4.35%
-5.00p

Personal Goods

11,630.28

17:15 23/10/24
0.59%
68.21

The news came a day after Mulberry announced that it had rejected a second takeover proposal of £111m, or 150p a share, saying it was “untenable”.

Mulberry’s rejection of the offer - up from a previous proposal of 130p a share - came after major shareholder Challice said it had no intention of selling its 56% stake to Frasers.

Frasers said it had become increasingly concerned over the governance of Mulberry, the apparent lack of commercial plan against a backdrop of increasing market headwinds and the financial position it finds itself in.

It said: “Whilst the response announcement is a disappointing outcome, Frasers remains a long-term supporter of the well-loved British brand, Mulberry.

“Frasers continues to believe that market headwinds, and a clear lack of commercial plan, place the company in a very difficult financial position. Frasers welcomes the presentation of a credible plan in the near term.”

Frasers owns a 37% stake in Mulberry.

At 1430 BST, Mulberry shares were down 8.7% at 105p.

Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: "The tug-of-war over the future of Mulberry has ended with Challice having the shareholder weight to pull the company on its side. Frasers' bid got stuck in the mud of hardened resistance from the board, which described the bid as untenable. Without a sharply higher bid to pique enough interest, Challice was never going to budge.

"The question now is whether Mike Ashley’s Frasers Group will get a bigger say on the way forward for Mulberry. Frasers Group has made it abundantly clear that it’s been very unhappy with the direction the company has been heading in, fearful of another Debenhams-style collapse which saw its investment evaporate. While this may be seen as a fit of angry bluster, engagement is likely to lead to a better outcome and smoother path to recovery rather than risk continual sniping from the sidelines. Whatever the path chosen it’s clear that the new CEO Andrea Baldo is set to stay under intense scrutiny as he attempts to turn the brand’s fortunes around."

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