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Last Updated: Friday, 30 June 2006, 13:20 GMT 14:20 UK
Russian bid for Arcelor rejected
Workers in a steel plant
The way now looks clear for an Arcelor-Mittal merger
Shareholders of European steel firm Arcelor have rejected a takeover offer from Russia's Severstal.

The offer had originally been backed by Arcelor's board, as a means of warding off an earlier bid from European rival Mittal Steel.

But under pressure from shareholders the board changed its mind, and earlier in June recommended the $32bn (£18.5bn; 25bn euros) Mittal bid instead.

Severstal has threatened to sue over the collapse of its agreement.

'Unwind agreement'

The deal that the Russian firm's owner, Alexei Mordashov, had reached with Arcelor would have seen him take a significant personal stake in the merged firm.

Investors controlling 57.94% of Arcelor capital voted to reject a tie-up with Severstal.

Until very recently Severstal had been floated by Arcelor as a "white knight" to ward off the attentions of Mittal Steel.

Arcelor president Joseph Kinsch said investors owning 60.4% of the firm's shares were represented at the shareholder meeting.

"Seeing this vote, the board will now unwind the agreement with Mr Mordashov," Mr Kinsch said.

Arcelor is now recommending acceptance of a share and cash deal from Mittal Steel which would create a market-leading group with 320,000 workers.




SEE ALSO
Luxembourg backs Mittal takeover
28 Jun 06 |  Business
Severstal may sue over steel deal
26 Jun 06 |  Business
Steel firm opts for Mittal offer
25 Jun 06 |  Business
Arcelor cancels buyback meeting
20 Jun 06 |  Business
Arcelor to merge with Severstal
26 May 06 |  Business
Britain's heavy metal billionaire
27 Jan 06 |  Business

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