AA’s biggest shareholder slams brakes on takeover

AA’s biggest shareholder slams brakes on takeover of breakdown company after calling £219m price tag ‘derisory’

The AA’s biggest shareholder has slammed the brakes on a takeover of the breakdown company after calling the £219m price tag ‘derisory’. 

London-based investor Albert Bridge Capital has said it plans to oppose the 35p-per-share deal proposed by private equity firms Towerbrook Capital and Warburg Pincus, which has been recommended by the AA’s board. 

A deal needs 75 per cent shareholder approval, meaning Albert Bridge with its 20 per cent stake has a huge say. 

Stalled: Albert Bridge Capital has said it plans to oppose the 35p-per-share deal

US hedge fund Davidson Kempner, with a 16 per cent stake, has already given its blessing to the deal. 

In a letter to shareholders, Albert Bridge’s chief investment officer Drew Dickson said the private equity deal ‘fundamentally undervalues’ the AA, The Sunday Telegraph reported. 

He added that the breakdown firm’s share price had been ‘artificially and exaggeratedly depressed’ by the pandemic. 

The 35p-per-share price is an 86 per cent cut to the company’s 250p price when it floated in 2014.