(Adds comments from G4S, shareholder, context)
By Yadarisa Shabong
March 16 (Reuters) - The G4S takeover saga finally
came to an end on Tuesday after a majority of the security
company's shareholders accepted a 3.8 billion pound ($5.28
billion) offer from U.S. rival Allied Universal, snubbing
hostile Canadian bidder GardaWorld.
Allied Universal said it had received valid acceptances
representing roughly 79% of the G4S share capital. The threshold
was 50% plus one G4S share.
"My team and I look forward to working with Allied to
support a successful integration of the two businesses," said
G4S Chief Executive Ashley Almanza.
The merger between G4S and private-equity backed Allied
Universal will create the world's largest private security
company, generating more than $18 billion in revenue and
employing more than 750,000 security guards and other staff.
Sweden's Securitas AB, another big player in the
U.S. private security market, will have to compete with an even
larger Allied after the acquisition is complete.
Sue Noffke, head of UK equities at G4S shareholder Schroders
, said that the company's "management and the board have
delivered a very good result for all stakeholders".
Allied, which plans to evaluate options for the G4S prisons
businesses, has largely obtained the required antitrust
regulatory approvals in the United States and European Union
(EU). The deal does not require approval from Britain because EU
clearance was obtained before the Brexit deadline.
The interest in buying G4S, which has presence in all major
continents, comes after the British company agreed in July to
pay 44 million pounds to the UK's Serious Fraud Office to avert
criminal charges after a long-running inquiry into electronic
tagging contracts.
GardaWorld made its interest public in September last year
but was faced with repeated rejections from the London-listed
company. Allied swooped in last December and its offer of 245
pence per share won over the G4S board, which recommended that
shareholders accept.
Low levels of acceptances from G4S shareholders, however,
had forced both potential buyers to extend their deadlines
multiple times as shareholders held out for a higher price.
The UK's takeover regulator last month stepped in to help to
resolve the impasse by setting up an auction to determine the
final prices the suitors were willing to pay for G4S.
But shortly after the auction period started GardaWorld
declared its 235 pence per share offer as final, effectively
ending the process before it had started.
Shares in G4S, which have risen by more than two thirds
since GardaWorld's made its offer public, closed at 244.5 pence
on Tuesday.
($1 = 0.7198 pounds)
(Reporting by Yadarisa Shabong in Bengaluru
Editing by Amy Caren Daniel and David Goodman)