Shares in Indian Hotels Co Ltd
Indian Hotels, rebuffed by Orient-Express in a recent approach to take a "significant" stake in the company, offered late on Thursday to pay a 40 percent premium to buy out the hotel group. Orient-Express owns a global portfolio of properties including Hotel Cipriani in Venice and the 21 Club in New York.
"It seems clear to us that (Indian Hotels) wants to position itself as a global hospitality chain," JPMorgan analysts wrote.
Shares in Orient-Express, which is headquartered in Bermuda, rose as much as 41 percent in New York on Thursday before closing at $11.05, up 22.5 percent on the day.
Indian Hotels, with a market value of $1.07 billion, is offering $12.63 a share in a rare hostile approach from an Indian acquirer.
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Orient-Express confirmed in a statement late on Thursday that it had received the proposal and would evaluate it. The company has a dual share structure that would make a hostile takeover hard to pull off.
Indian Hotels, which owns the landmark Taj Mahal Palace hotel in Mumbai, was thwarted in its 2007 offer to form a strategic alliance with Orient-Express. That year it bought a 10 percent stake in the company, and it now owns about 7 percent.
Indian Hotels met with Orient-Express in August, but its effort to take a significant stake in the company was rejected.
One analyst at a Mumbai brokerage who tracks Indian Hotels and declined to be identified said the proposal does not look attractive for the Mumbai-based company's shareholders.
"It will be earnings dilutive and worsen the debt profile in a troubled business environment. Orient-Express gets a third of its revenue from Europe, which is facing problems," he said.
"Paying 40 percent premium for a property in a low-growth region is probably not a great idea in this environment."