WASHINGTON, Dec 31 ― Shareholders of US jeweller Tiffany yesterday overwhelmingly approved a merger with France's LVMH, ending months of drama with a marriage of two luxury icons.
About 99 per cent of shareholders voted in favour of the union during a special meeting that was held virtually, a spokesperson told AFP.
The green light was the last step needed to finalise the tie-up scheduled for early January.
The parent to luxury brands such as Louis Vuitton, Dior and Moet & Chandon, LVMH announced its plan to acquire Tiffany and its iconic robin's egg blue gift boxes at the end of 2019.
But the French company walked away from its proposal in September after claiming a series of poor decisions by Tiffany's board.
The companies buried the hatchet in October after Tiffany agreed to a lower price to prevent the deal from collapsing.
The price was dropped by US$3.50 (RM14.13) a share to US$131.50, lowering the value of the deal to US$15.8 billion from the original US$16.2 billion.
LVMH had already obtained authorisation from the authorities for the merger.
Tiffany will be removed from the New York Stock Exchange, but the French company has not yet said how it plans to transform the jeweller, which has suffered in recent years from competition from brands favored by millennials. ― AFP
Source: Malay Mail
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