To consider open offer if price falls below Rs 2,100 a share. |
Stung by the lukewarm response to its earlier open offer to buy i-flex shares, US-based Oracle has maintained it has no plans to come out with additional open offers for i-flex shareholders for at least the next five years. In a recent filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, however, it added a rider stating it may think of an open offer if the share price is below Rs 2,100 per share — its offer price of December 7, 2006. |
Oracle holds 83 per cent of i-flex’s shares and has been consistently trying to acquire the rest in a bid to delist i-flex from the Indian bourses. It would require a little over 90 per cent of shares to do so. The move will help it to integrate i-flex with its business worldwide. |
Under current norms, if the minority shareholders do not surrender shares willingly to the new promoter, the Securities and Exchange Board of India’s (Sebi’s) takeover code requires the new promoter to come out with a proposal to buy back the rest of the shares from the minority shareholders under a proposal to delist the company. |
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