Dollar General (NYSE: DG) Goes After Family Dollar By Diane Alter

Dollar General (NYSE: DG) stock is up today after the company made a bid for Family Dollar. This comes three weeks after Dollar Tree's first bid for the discount retailer. The post Dollar General (NYSE: DG) Goes After Family Dollar appeared first on Money Morning - Only the News You Can Profit From .

The bidding war for Family Dollar Stores has begun.

NYSE DG stockMonday, Dollar General Corp. (NYSE: DG), America's biggest discount retailer, announced it is offering $9.7 billion (including debt) to buy Family Dollar Stores (NYSE: FDO), a move aimed at thwarting FDO's planned merger with Dollar Tree Inc. (Nasdaq: DLTR).

News sent shares of FDO and DG stock up some 5% in pre-market to $79.99 and $62.01 respectively. Dollar Tree shares, meanwhile, were clipped 1.45% to $54.80.

Under terms of the deal, Dollar General will pay $78.50 a share in cash for each outstanding share of Family Dollar. That's substantially more than the $74.50 a share cash and stock bid Dollar Tree offered last month. At the time, Dollar Tree's offer was a 23% premium to Family Dollar's stock price prior to the announcement.

Dollar General said a merger with Family Dollar would create a "preeminent small box retailer" boasting a store count of around 20,000 peppered across 46 states. Combined sales would total more than $28 billion, according to Dollar General.

Dollar General also said it expects to generate $550 million to $600 million in cost savings.

"For Family Dollar shareholders, our proposal is financially superior to the current transaction agreement with Dollar Tree and would provide Family Dollar shareholders with a substantial premium and immediate liquidity for their shares," Dollar General Chairman and Chief Executive Rick Dreiling said.

Dreiling, who earlier this year had revealed plans to step down, would instead stay on board and hold both CEO and chairman roles at the combined company through 2016.

The rival bid from DG isn't a big shock to analysts.

Credit Suisse said after Dollar Tree's bid that a Dollar General counteroffer would likely come - probably with an $80 price tag. So, Dollar General's $78.50 bid might indeed be the first of several bids should a bidding war ensue.

There is a hefty $305 million breakup fee that Family Dollar will have to pay Dollar Tree if the deal doesn't happen. Any bidder would have to factor that in, plus an additional premium.

Dollar General (NYSE: DG) and Rivals Look for More Improvement

Dollar Stores have already been struggling amid an anemic U.S. economy, job instability, and growing competition.

Also pressuring dollar stores are some influential investors.

Legendary hedge fund investor Carl Icahn disclosed a 9.4% stake in Family Dollar in June and has pushed for sale.

Famed activist investor Nelson Peltz, with a 7.4% stake, gained a board seat nearly three years ago after trying to buy the entire company and expressing concern over the discount retailer's stock price.

John Paulson, the iconic founder of hedge fund Paulson & Co., and Steven Cohen, founder of Point72 Asset Management, formerly known as SAC Capital, also have sizable positions. The four men combined own about 24% of FDO's outstanding shares.

No word yet from these industry heavyweights on DG's rival bid.

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The post Dollar General (NYSE: DG) Goes After Family Dollar appeared first on Money Morning - Only the News You Can Profit From.

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