Shares in both China's state-owned shipping company, COSCO, and Orient Overseas (International) Ltd. Surged Monday after COSCO agreed to buy its smaller rival for $6.3 billion.
The merger will form a new Asian shipping giant, helping COSCO compete as a wave of consolidation in the industry creates a handful of huge global competitors.
By today, COSCO's shares traded in Hong Kong had jumped 6.1 per cent while Orient Overseas' shares soared 20.8 per cent.
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The transaction is subject to antitrust review by Chinese, European and US authorities, according to a filing with the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
The filing said COSCO will pay $10.07 per share (HK $78.67), a premium of 38 percent over Orient's Friday share price on the Hong Kong Exchange. The total price tag for the deal will be $6.3 billion (HK$49.2 billion).
The shipping industry has been struggling amid sluggish global trade and falling rates. Danish shipping firm Maersk acquired Hamburg Sud, a German company, in December, while French shipper CMA CGM bought Singapore-based Neptune Orient Lines last year.
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