Carl Icahn Definitely, Probably Secures Purchase of Pep Boys, Maybe

Aaron Cole
by Aaron Cole

Stop us if you’ve heard this one before:

Billionaire investor, activist and horse racing enthusiast Carl Icahn bid to buy Pep Boys on Tuesday for just over $1 billion, outpricing Japanese tire giant Bridgestone for the franchise, Bloomberg reported (via Automotive News).

Bridgestone’s refusal to tender a competing offer after its final bid of $947 million for the 800 Pep Boys stores seemingly means that Icahn is the winner — although we’ve been here before.

Icahn offered up to $18.50 per share of the company, of which he already owns 12 percent, which is slightly higher than the company’s stock during trading Wednesday.

Originally, Pep Boys indicated that a lower offer by Bridgestone would be a better deal, until it read this statement:

“We cannot understand the actions of the directors in that they know we were willing to offer a lot more than $17,” Icahn told Bloomberg on Monday.

Oh, right. Math.

Icahn said in October that the franchise would complement another auto parts retailer that he owns, Auto Plus. That sparked a bidding war between Icahn and Bridgestone that lasted, maybe, up until Wednesday. Pep Boys said it initially balked at Icahn’s offer of $13.50 per share in favor of a $15 per share bid from Bridgestone. Icahn raised his bid to $15.50, which Bridgestone matched, before Icahn offered $16.50. Bridgestone countered at $17 per share, before finally relenting after Icahn’s $18.50 per share bid, according to Marketwatch.

Bridgestone was interested in purchasing the franchise to complement its own 2,200 tire centers in the U.S. and Canada. Icahn may still split the franchise, although his plans weren’t made public. In the deal, Icahn agreed to pay a $39.5 million “breakup” fee to Bridgestone.

CNBC reported the deal with Icahn could be done by the first quarter of 2016. Unless it doesn’t get done.


Aaron Cole
Aaron Cole

More by Aaron Cole

Comments
Join the conversation
 2 comments
  • Lorenzo Lorenzo on Dec 30, 2015

    I wonder when Pep Boys management tires of this and decides to stay independent? Icahn's Auto Plus has full saturation of the lower 48 states and doesn't need the 800 Pep Boys stores. It seems Icahn just wants to keep Bridgestone out of the auto parts business, since it's stores are mainly tire outlets. With Icahn liable to sell off or shut down a large number of Pep Boys stores, why sell out? A hostile takeover would cost Icahn much more than he's offering, and that's the true value of Pep Boys.

  • ClutchCarGo ClutchCarGo on Dec 30, 2015

    Why? I imagine that Pep Boys mgmt stands to profit handsomely from golden parachutes or other incentives in the event that Icahn does anything like that, not to mention what the bidding war has done for their own stock holdings.

  • ToolGuy If these guys opened a hotel outside Cincinnati I would go there to sleep, and to dream.
  • ToolGuy Michelin's price increases mean that my relationship with them as a customer is not sustainable. 🙁
  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X I wonder if Fiat would pull off old world Italian charm full of well intentioned stereotypes.
  • Chelsea I actually used to work for this guy
  • SaulTigh Saw my first Cybertruck last weekend. Looked like a kit car...not an even panel to be seen.
Next