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Nippon Paint Offers $8.6B for AkzoNobel Decorative Unit

July 13 (Reuters) - AkzoNobel has received multiple proposals from Nippon Paint to buy its decorative paints business valuing ​the business at €7.5 billion ($8.55 billion), it said on Monday, a month ‌after Nippon Paint withdrew an offer to buy the whole firm along with U.S.-based Sherwin-Williams for €12.5 billion.

AkzoNobel, which makes the Dulux brand of paints, rejected Nippon Paint and Sherwin-Williams' earlier offer ​in May, pushing ahead instead with its plan to merge with ​U.S. coatings maker Axalta.

Paint makers are pursuing mergers to save money ⁠amid rising costs, intense competition, and uncertainty sparked by U.S. President Donald Trump's ​tariffs on imported goods.

In the Monday statement, AkzoNobel said its board continues to ​recommend the Axalta merger and that Nippon Paint's offer significantly undervalues its decorative paints business.

Nippon Paint's offers are conditional and non-binding, AkzoNobel said, adding that its merger agreement with Axalta ​restricts it from any engagement with Nippon Paint.

No specific matters regarding the acquisition ​have been decided, Nippon Paint said in a statement earlier on Monday.

The approach was first ‌reported ⁠by Bloomberg News on Sunday.

In May, AkzoNobel said Nippon Paint and Sherwin-Williams' offer to take over the entire firm undervalued its business, lacked certainty on regulatory clearances and would split the company between two suitors.

Merging with Axalta would bring ​cost savings of $600 ​million and enable ⁠the combined entity to focus more on coatings, which are more resilient in a consumer downturn than decorative paints, Chief ​Executive Greg Poux-Guillaume said in an interview with Reuters ​in 2025.

Poux-Guillaume ⁠would remain as the group's chief executive following the merger.

AkzoNobel and Axalta are set to hold shareholder meetings to vote on the Axalta tie-up on August 5.

Nippon ⁠Paint ​shares fell around 2.5% on Monday afternoon, trading ​at around 1,050 yen per share.

($1 = 0.8775 euros)

Reporting by Mihika Sharma in Bengaluru and Anton Bridge and ​Miho Uranaka in Tokyo; Editing by Rashmi Aich, Jamie Freed and Kate Mayberry

Source: Reuters


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