Previous Page  5 / 44 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 5 / 44 Next Page
Page Background

ANALYSIS

Last year was hailed as the year of the

mega-merger, with deals like Royal Dutch

Shell’s takeover of BG Group

8

, and Anheuser-

Busch InBev’s tie-up with SABMiller

9

to

create a drinks giant. But the deal-making

trend has continued this year with

September’s announcement of a merger

between Bayer, the German pharmaceutical

company, and its US rival Monsanto

10

adding

to a growing list of corporate activity.

One factor driving these deals is sluggish

economic growth across the world, which

means companies are finding it harder to

keep sales moving ahead; acquiring a rival’s

sales can help fill the growth gap. But there

is also an industrial impetus for some of this

year’s deals, which are changing the shape

of the chemicals industry, and agrochemicals

in particular. Professor John Colley, an expert

in mega-mergers at Warwick Business

MERGERS

MEGA TAKEOVERS DEFY SLOW ECONOMIC GROWTH

From drinks and oil giants to seed companies, merging is making business sense

School, says these deals mean the ‘Big 6’ in

the global seed market will become the ‘Big

3’ and means there could be significant

competition hurdles to overcome.

‘Rapid concentration of the industry will

give the US Department of Justice plenty to

consider with the related mergers of DuPont

and Dow Chemical, and ChemChina and

Syngenta. It is anything but clear how

customers will benefit with such a major

reduction in suppliers. Expect plenty of

demands gain competition clearance in

Europe and the US.’ There have already been

signs that US regulators are taking a more

active approach to takeover regulation, with

Allergan and Pfizer abandoning deals.

8

shell.com

,April 2015

9

ab-inbev.com

, November 2015

10

money.cnn.com

, September 2016

news

THE INVESTOR

|

05

Getty Images

More than a third of people over the age

of 64 have not made a will, according to

research by the Law Society

5

. Many may not

be aware that the failure to formally state

what will happen to their estates when they

die means their loved ones could end up

missing out on their inheritance.

Despite recent changes, the rules on

intestacy, or dying without a will, still do not

recognise the wide variety of modern family

relationships. Current rules differ depending

on whether or not children are involved. For

childless married couples and civil partners,

the surviving spouse inherits everything. If

the couple are not married, the partner is

not entitled to anything. If there are children,

the spouse gets the first £250,000 and half

of everything above that value, with the

remainder split between the children – but

only natural and adopted children qualify;

stepchildren will get nothing

6

.

The Law Society estimates that annual

Inheritance Tax revenues will be £8 billion

INTESTACY

WHERE THERE’S A WILL, THERE’S A WAY

Countless people die intestate, leaving behind an inheritance headache for loved ones

by 2018

7

and, while large estates will

always incur tax bills, there are legitimate

ways to reduce the cost – provided there is

a valid will and some careful planning of

how, and where, assets are distributed to

survivors following a death.

Obi Nnochiri, Senior Wealth Management

Consultant at St. James’s Place, said:

‘Recent high-profile cases have provided

a timely reminder of why having an

up-to-date will, executed by a qualified and

experienced individual, is so important.

Ideally, the individual helping you write the

will should also be able to advise on the

most appropriate ways to structure assets

so that any potential tax burden for

inheritors is reduced or eliminated.

Will writing involves the referral to a service

that is separate and distinct to those offered

by St. James’s Place.Wills are not regulated

by the Financial Conduct Authority.

5, 6, 7

lawsociety.org.uk

, October 2014