Warner Music Won’t Bid for Believe After All

Warner Music Group announced over the weekend that it has called off plans to submit a binding offer to acquire French music company Believe. The label did not elaborate on its decision, only that it was made “after careful consideration.”

Believe followed up in a statement, saying it will “review the situation with all interested parties (including the consortium) to determine next steps in relation to the possible evolution of the company’s control.”

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The shift arrives less than two weeks after Believe’s board of directors gave WMG the green light — and access to financial data — to make a formal bid for the company, which owns digital distributor TuneCore, publishing administration service Sentric and a stable of record labels including Naïve, Nuclear Blast and Groove Attack.

WMG said earlier that it approached Believe in February with a non-binding offer to combine the two companies at a price of “at least” 17 euros ($18.60) per share. Believe then gave WMG until Sunday, April 7 to “submit a binding, unconditional and fully financed offer.” Warner dropped out a day before the deadline.

Warner argued in March that its offer was more attractive than a rival takeover bid from Believe founder and CEO Denis Ladegaillerie and a consortium of shareholders, which had offered 15 euros per share and was backed by the board of directors.

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Upon learning of WMG’s interest in Believe, the consortium tried to speed up the acquisition process by waiving a condition that the board’s ad hoc committee receive an independent expert report into the financial fairness of their offer. A review by the French financial regulatory body, Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF), stated the group could not waive this condition.

Marc Schneider

Billboard