Following Thursday morning's announcement that Perpetual had brushed off a second “unsolicited” takeover proposal in just a week, Pendal released a statement noting that the Scheme Implementation Deed the pair inked in August “does not permit Perpetual to terminate or otherwise abandon the scheme in order to pursue a proposal”.
In an ASX filing, Pendal referred to media speculation about further approaches from a consortium comprising of BPEA Private Equity Fund VIII and Regal Partners Limited, and other parties, seeking alternative transactions with Perpetual, noting that Perpetual itself had informed Pendal to the effect.
“Pendal wishes to update its shareholders and the market that despite requests by Perpetual for a delay, it intends to proceed to the first court hearing for the scheme this week and to seek orders convening the scheme meeting and for despatch of the Scheme Booklet to shareholders, with a scheme meeting to occur in mid-December 2022,” the firm said, hinting at strained relations.
“Pendal notes that while the Scheme Implementation Deed permits Perpetual to engage with another proposal, it does not permit Perpetual to terminate or otherwise abandon the scheme in order to pursue a proposal,” Pendal said.
“For clarity, the deed does not preclude Perpetual responding to a proposal, but any resulting transaction can only be implemented in circumstances where the scheme is accommodated. Any speculation to the contrary is inaccurate and contrary to a certain and well-functioning market for corporate control.”
In a separate note to shareholders, Perpetual has stressed that the deal with Pendal would proceed, despite takeover attempts from the BPEA Private Equity Fund VIII and Regal Partners Limited consortium.
Maja Garaca Djurdjevic
Maja's career in journalism spans well over a decade across finance, business and politics. Now an experienced editor and reporter across all elements of the financial services sector, prior to joining Momentum Media, Maja reported for several established news outlets in Southeast Europe, scrutinising key processes in post-conflict societies.