Japan-based Softbank Group Corp (OTC: SFTBF) (OTC: SFTBY) and UK-based ARM Holdings plc (ADR) (NASDAQ: ARMH) announced on Monday the two companies will merge. As part of the agreement,
SoftBank will acquire ARM Holdings for the equivalent of $67.27 per ADR-traded share, or roughly $32 billion.
The agreement also marks the first major M&A deal since the British people voted to leave the European Union in late May. So
the question investors are now asking is what role, if any, did the Brexit vote have on the deal.
According to Bloomberg
News' Jeff McCracken, SoftBank may have only began to look at acquiring ARM Holdings after the vote took place. He added that
ARM Holding is a high profiled company that wasn't necessarily shopping itself around for a sale.
Related Link: Is It Possible To
Avoid The Next Brexit?
Mark Thierfelder, a partner at a private equity firm called Dechert noted that foreign buyers of U.K. assets could be attracted
to the immediate discount they now get given the national currency's plunge following the Brexit vote.
On the other hand, Thierfelder added that there is some uncertainty around the M&A deal given his general view that the
Brexit outcome hurts the M&A landscape in Britain. He did point out that ARM has little to no operations inside the country, so
this may prove to be a "proxy in the post Brexit world."
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