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Waste Management wastes little time in a buyout move for Republic

Posted Jul 14th 2008 10:35AM by Tom TaulliTom Taulli RSS Feed
Filed under: Deals

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The largest waste disposal company in the U.S., Waste Management Inc. (NYSE: WMI), wants to get even bigger. The company announced today that it proposes to pay $34 per share – or $6.3 billion -- for rival Republic Services, Inc. (NYSE: RSG).

On problem here is that Republic is already the subject of a merger with Allied Waste Industries, Inc. (NYSE: AW) announced in mid June. Although, if you take a look at the Republic-Allied merger agreement, there are clauses that allow Republic to entertain alternative offers. What's more, it looks like Waste Management may have access to internal data.

All in all, Waste Management is highly confident it will get the deal done: the firm has a plan for dealing with antitrust issues (likely involving divestitures); the investment grade status should be maintained; and the dividend will remain intact.

Without the benefit of any due diligence, Waste Management believes the deal will be accretive in the first year and provide at least $150 million in synergies. Basically, there should be lots of room to rip out duplicative costs, as well as get efficiencies from scale.

Waste Management also announced today its preliminary figures for Q2. The company plans to generate revenues of $3.49 billion, up 3.9% from the same period a year ago. Earnings are expected to be $0.64 per share.

So far in today's trading, though, Waste Management's stock is off 5% to $34.75. Of course, Republic stock is 15.6% higher to $32.25, while Allied Waste shares are down 7% to $11.15.

Tom Taulli is the author of various books, including The Complete M&A Handbook and The Edgar Online Guide to Decoding Financial Statements. He also operates MergerBook.com.

Tags: allied waste, AlliedWaste, aw, inthenews, Republic Services, RepublicServices, rsg, Waste Management, WasteManagement, wmi

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