‘White Knight’ for Texaco May Be Royal Dutch
- Share via
NEW YORK — Texaco Inc. shares rose Wednesday on speculation that a friendly suitor will emerge with a bid more attractive than Carl C. Icahn’s yet-to-be-financed offer of $60 a share.
Texaco, whose board rejected Icahn’s offer and labeled it “illusory,” was rumored to have been approached by the European oil giant Royal Dutch Shell Group as a friendly bidder, Wall Street sources said Wednesday.
“The rumor is that Royal Dutch will make a bid at $64 a share,” one money manager said.
Antitrust Problems
“Royal Dutch is ready, willing and able to be a white knight,” he said, citing its $10 billion in cash, low debt and expressed desire to buy certain Texaco assets. Texaco rose $1.625 to $51.75 on the New York Stock Exchange. (A white knight is a term that refers to a company that rescues another from a hostile takeover by buying the entire firm or portions of its assets.)
However, some analysts said such a merger would likely face antitrust problems in Washington and could require the sale of some assets of the two groups.
Icahn, who offered $12.4 billion for the shares of Texaco he does not own, will meet with financial analysts Thursday to unveil his plans to fund the takeover. He owns 14.8% of Texaco’s stock and is the largest Texaco shareholder.
Both Firms Decline Comment
Texaco officials declined comment on the reports of a white knight, citing a policy of not commenting on market rumors. A spokesman for Shell Oil Co., the U.S. unit of Royal Dutch Shell Group, declined comment.
Also, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. was rumored to have hired investment banks Merrill Lynch and Drexel Burnham Lambert to study financing a bid for Texaco. Kohlberg, which recently said it holds about 4.9% of Texaco, declined comment.
Since it has never launched a hostile bid for a company, traders saw Kohlberg as another possible white knight.
More to Read
Inside the business of entertainment
The Wide Shot brings you news, analysis and insights on everything from streaming wars to production — and what it all means for the future.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.