Peppa Pig owner rejects £1bn approach from ITV

Canada’s Entertainment One says ‘offer fundamentally undervalues’ company

Canada’s Entertainment One, the owner of children’s TV brand Peppa Pig, said it had rejected a £1 billion takeover offer which, according to a source, came from UK broadcaster ITV.

Canada's Entertainment One, the owner of children's TV brand Peppa Pig, said it had rejected a £1 billion (€895 million) takeover offer which, according to a source, came from UK broadcaster ITV.

“The board of eOne has reviewed the proposal and has unanimously rejected it on basis that it fundamentally undervalues the company and its prospects,” it said on Wednesday.

ITV, Britain’s biggest free-to-air commercial broadcaster, has been buying production companies, particularly in the drama and reality TV genres, to reduce its reliance on British broadcast advertising revenues. It has been pursuing eOne since March at least, according to reports.

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The proposal priced at 236 pence a share represents a 19 per cent premium on eOne's opening share price on Tuesday. Analysts at Investec said last month that with more than 80 per cent of sales outside Britain, the company looked relatively attractive given concerns over the value of sterling and British economic risks after the vote to leave the European Union.

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They raised their price target to 245 pence a share, based on their estimates for the year to the end of March 2017, when they saw pretax profit rising to £119.2 million from £100 million for the previous year. – (Reuters)