(Updates shares, adds detail and background)
By Yadarisa Shabong
Sept 7 (Reuters) - Aerospace parts maker TransDigm
bowed out of an $8.7 billion takeover battle with fellow U.S.
bidder Parker-Hannifin for Britain's Meggitt on
Tuesday, wiping as much as 14% off British target's share price.
Meggitt, which had agreed a 6.3 billion pound ($8.7 billion)
offer from Ohio-based Parker, saw some of the gains made in
expectation of a bidding war wiped off its stock after TransDigm
said it could not conclude a possible 900-pence-a-share bid.
Shares in Meggitt, which was approached by TransDigm last
month and whose stock has gained nearly 80% since Parker's offer
was made public in early August, were down 12% at 738 pence by
1306 GMT, below Parker's 800 pence-per-share bid.
TransDigm said it had decided not to proceed based on the
"quite limited" due diligence information it had access to.
Parker has made a series of commitments to the British
government on jobs and security to seal its bid for Meggitt,
which supplies wheels and brakes for civil jets as well as other
components used in military aircraft.
TransDigm, which is also based in Ohio, had said it had
reached a memorandum of understanding with Meggitt's pension
plan trustees as well as communicated its commitments to the UK
government "comparable" to those offered by Parker.
"However, consistent with our disciplined approach to
capital allocation, we make acquisitions only when we see a
clear path to achieving our investment return goals with a
reasonable degree of certainty," it said in a statement.
The British government had said it was "closely monitoring"
the proposed takeover of the Coventry-based company, which has
set a Sept. 21 date for a shareholder vote on the Parker deal.
Shares in TransDigm rose marginally, while Parker's were up
0.7%, in premarket trade on the New York Stock Exchange.
London's stock market has seen several takeover battles in
recent months, with supermarket Morrisons the most high
profile target of a bidding war between two U.S. suitors.
($1 = 0.7257 pounds)
(Reporting by Yadarisa Shabong in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil
D'Silva and Alexander Smith)