Steel Partners sells off stakes in Bull-Dog and Kikkoman; TCI is holding paper losses in J-Power
April 18, 2008
By Ken Worsley
Earlier today, the Nikkei reported that Steel Partners has sold off all of its shares in the Bull-Dog Sauce Company, as well as Kikkoman. A year ago, Steel Partners held about 10% of Bull-Dog shares, and launched its takeover offer in May. After the Supreme Court declared that Bull-Dog’s anti-takeover defense measures were legal, Steel Partners brought in about 2 billion yen from the company when it bought back its stock warrants. It has been speculated that Bull-Dog has spent up to 70% of its sales revenue from the past year on boosting its cross shareholdings.
According to the paper, Steel Partners also made about 2 billion yen from its investment in Kikkoman. Although we don’t know the reasons exactly why Steel has decided to pull out of its Kikkoman position, it is certain that Kikkoman is gearing up to spend quite a bit of money on a new ketchup factory in China as well as 6 or 7 soy sauce factories in South America, China, North America, Oceania, Southeast Asia and Eastern Europe. The construction is expected to cost tens of billions of yen and bring Kikkoman’s production volume near the range of an annual 1 million kiloliters.
Back on April 1, the Nikkei published a piece entitled Firms Begin To Dismantle Takeover Defenses As Benefits Remain Unclear, which highlighted the fact that there have been no successful hostile takeovers in Japan, that courts tend to be friendly to management, that takeover measures hurt share value, and that poison pill measures can be quite costly to a firm.
Six days later, the Nikkei published a piece entitled More Firms Adopt Takeover Defenses That Seek Shareholders’ OK which stated that 443 firms had adopted anti-takeover measures by the end of FY2007.
Finally, it’s worth noting that just as Steel Partners exits now from its Bull-Dog chapter with a profit, that The Children’s Investment Fund is estimated to be holding 16 billion yen in paper losses deriving from its investment in J-Power. Today’s Yomiuri tells us, “If TCI refuses to obey the government order (to stop purchasing shares in J-Power), the fund or its executives may face a fine or prison term of up to three years.”
J-Power has no anti-takeover measures in place.
Comments
4 Responses to “Steel Partners sells off stakes in Bull-Dog and Kikkoman; TCI is holding paper losses in J-Power”
Got something to say?








“If TCI refuses to obey the government order … J-Power has no anti-takeover measures in place.”
Apparently, if a company isn’t xenophobic enough, the government will step in and do the job?
PS: What possible reason could Children’s have for continuing to purchase stock? Maybe the government should buy them all a copy of that classic movie, The Money Pit.
I sold off my stake in Toyota, but it didn’t make the news.
Grahm, you’re hardly alone.
Gotta love the headline of this paper:
Statement by the Minister of Finance and the Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry
~Japan’s Policy to Promote Foreign Direct Investment is Unchanged~