The Oklahoman

Shareholde­rs back tobacco merger

- BY EMERY P. DALESIO AP Business Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. — Shareholde­rs of British American Tobacco and Reynolds American Inc. on Wednesday approved merging into the world’s largest publicly traded tobacco company.

Shareholde­rs of both companies approved London-based BAT buying the 57.8 percent of Reynolds it does not already own. The purchase is expected to become effective next week.

Each Reynolds share will convert to $29.44 in cash and 0.5260 BAT shares.

The $49 billion cash-and-stock offer announced in January valued each Reynolds share at $59.64, up from $56.50 offered in October. The price is nearly 40 percent above the value of Reynolds shares before the October offer, BAT said in a disclosure to U.S. securities regulators.

“We look forward to welcoming Reynolds group employees to British American Tobacco and to realizing the benefits of operating these two great companies as one stronger, global tobacco and Next Generation Products business,” BAT Chief Executive Nicandro Durante said in a prepared statement.

Here’s a look at the companies and the takeover:

The impact

The takeover is the latest in the string of consolidat­ions that has seen the number of cigarette companies shrink this century. The deal gives BAT greater access to the U.S. market, where cigarette prices and taxes are low relative to consumer incomes but the customer base in shrinking. The combined company gains strength to increase sales in developing countries, where health restrictio­ns aren’t as strict. The combinatio­n also improves the sales push of vapor and nicotine replacemen­t products and developmen­t of other new products.

BAT projects saving at least $400 million a year through cost-cutting of corporate operations, increased purchasing power, and other supplychai­n efficienci­es. BAT also expects to add about $38 billion of debt with the acquisitio­n on top of nearly $22 billion at the end of last year, the company said in a securities filing last month.

The brands

BAT sells Dunhill, Rothmans, Kent, Benson & Hedges and Lucky Strike cigarettes. The company said its cigarettes reach about 12 percent of the world’s 1 billion smokers. The company also sells rollyour-own cut tobacco, snus, cigars and vapor products.

Winston-Salem, North Carolina-based Reynolds is the second-largest U.S. cigarette company and owns the Camel and Pall Mall cigarette brands.

Reynolds estimates that about half of its consolidat­ed net sales last year were from menthol cigarettes, driven by segment-leader Newport. The company also sells smokeless tobacco, Natural American Spirit cigarettes and nicotine replacemen­t products.

Origin stories

British-American Tobacco was establishe­d in 1902 and spread across the former British Empire including India and East Africa.

Reynolds traces its roots to 1875, when Richard Joshua Reynolds started a chewing tobacco company in the city that has been its headquarte­rs since. The takeover marks an end for what became R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, which stamped its home state of North Carolina as a center during a bygone era of smoking popularity through its Winston and Salem brands.

The company’s links with British American Tobacco date to 2004, when R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. merged with BAT’s Brown & Williamson unit, creating Reynolds American. The two companies already have a technology-sharing agreement in the developmen­t of electronic cigarettes.

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