ICE Confirms It May Bid for LSE as Shares Soar to Record

The owner of the New York Stock Exchange confirmed its considering a bid. The Atlanta-based company hasnt approached LSEs board about a deal.

(Bloomberg) — Intercontinental Exchange Inc. said its exploring an offer for the London Stock Exchange Group Plc, attempting to scuttle the U.K. companys merger talks with Deutsche Boerse AG, which would create a dominant European stock exchange operator.

ICE, the owner of the New York Stock Exchange, confirmed its considering a bid after Bloomberg News reported the deliberations on Monday. The Atlanta-based company hasnt approached LSEs board about a deal, it said in a statement. The news propelled LSEs shares up as much as 8.8 percent in London trading, the highest level since 2001, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

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There can be no certainty that any offer will be made, nor as to the terms on which any offer will be made, ICE said Tuesday.

While the U.S. firm is aware it may face political and corporate pushback if it tries to break up the European marriage, ICE has concluded that LSE shareholders can be persuaded by a higher offer,people familiar with the deliberations said. At the least, a counterbid could force Deutsche Boerse to increase its offer, one of the people said.

LSE is clearly a highly sought after strategic asset, said Niki Beattie, head of Market Structure Partners, which advises brokers and exchanges. Deutsche Boerse has probably been doing the courting for longer than ICE, so I think theyre coming from behind.

CME Group Inc. is also working with advisers to assess whether it could challenge the deal, separate people familiar with the matter said. While a bid for LSE is the most likely option, discussions are at an early stage and the Chicago-based exchange firm may choose not to proceed, they said.

Takeover Deadline

ICE is unlikely to make a move before the March 22 U.K. takeover deadline for Deutsche Boerse to make a formal offer for LSE, one of the people said.

ICE is working with advisers, including Morgan Stanley, to prepare an offer for LSE that may outpace its German rivals offer, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because the talks are private.

Representatives Morgan Stanley and CME declined to comment.

LSEs board confirmed that it hasnt received a proposal from ICE and said theres no certainty that an offer will be presented, according to a statement on Tuesday. The exchange company said talks between LSE and Deutsche Boerse are continuing. A spokesman for Deutsche Boerse also confirmed talks are ongoing.

Exchange Deals

The exchange business is rife with acquisitions. ICE, led by Chief Executive Officer Jeff Sprecher, became a global powerhouse in part through dealmaking, such as the 2013 purchase of NYSE Euronext. In October, Sprecher expanded its data- services business with the $5.2 billion acquisition of Interactive Data Holdings Corp.

ICE has made unsolicited offers for competitors before. In 2007, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange prevailed in its quest to buy the Chicago Board of Trade over an unsolicited $11.8 billion offer from ICE.

Kelly Loeffler, an ICE executive and Sprechers wife, paid a bellboy at the Boca Raton Resort & Club to slip the companys proposal under CBOT executives doors at 6:45 a.m. that morning, a person with direct knowledge of the matter said in 2012. The ICE counteroffer forced the Chicago Merc to improve its bid three times.

European Champion

Deutsche Boerse and LSE last week announced plans to combine and create a global player worth at least 20 billion pounds ($28 billion), which could better compete with ICE as well as CME Group, the worlds largest derivatives market. A German-British merger could also give customers a European champion for primary markets in London, Frankfurt and Milan, as well as access to a pan-European stock venue called Turquoise.

The transaction would gather the Euro Stoxx 50 Index, the most valuable equity benchmark in Europe, and FTSE Russells portfolio of indexes under the same roof. This is the third time that the German exchange group has sought to buy LSE since the turn of the century. Previous attempts failed in 2000 and 2005.

–With assistance from Ruth David, Matthew Leising, Nick Baker and Matthew Monks.