Schroders says Avast sale price materially undervalues stock

by | Aug 19, 2021

Cybersecurity firm Avast’s largest independent shareholder has voiced concerns that the company has undervalued itself in its £6.2bn sale agreement to an American rival.
British asset manager Schroders said the terms of Avast’s sale to Arizona-based outfit NortonLifeLock had “materially” undervalued the FTSE 100-listed group, with Sue Noffke, Schroders’ head of UK equities, telling The Times that the planned takeover risked the business being sold “too cheaply”.

Given Schroders’ reputation and 6.3% stake in the software group, the asset manager’s criticism of the deal could pave the way for a potential rebellion against the agreement, despite Avast’s board already having recommended the terms to shareholders.

As of 0925 BST, Avast shares were up 0.036% at 593.62p.

Related articles

Ryanair passenger numbers jump 9% in December

Ryanair passenger numbers jump 9% in December

(Sharecast News) - Budget airline Ryanair reported a 9% jump in December passenger numbers on Wednesday. Traffic rose to 12.54 million from 11.52m in the same month a year earlier, while the load factor - which gauges how full the planes are - ticked down to 91% from...

Wizz Are passenger numbers soar in December

Wizz Are passenger numbers soar in December

(Sharecast News) - Hungary-based budget airline Wizz Air reported a strong rise in December passenger numbers as demand continued to rebound from the Covid pandemic. The company on Wednesday said it carried 4,964,857 passengers, an 18.8% increase year on year. For the...

Trending stories

Join our mailing list

Subscribe to our mailing list to receive regular updates!

x