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allstarsplus
03-06-2007, 12:03 PM
Group led by Eisner buying card maker Topps

Associated Press


NEW YORK -- The Topps Co., maker of baseball cards and Bazooka bubble gum, said Tuesday it accepted a $385.4 million takeover offer from a buyout group that includes former Disney CEO Michael Eisner, but the deal drew immediate opposition from one of its own board members.


Topps director Arnaud Ajdler, along with the investment firm Crescendo Partners II, launched a campaign to kill the deal. Crescendo owns about 6.6 percent of the company's shares, according to filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Ajdler is also a managing partner of Crescendo.


Ajdler said Tuesday he had not yet been in touch with other major shareholders but he thought the deal should be abandoned because negotiations did not go through a proper process and that the Eisner-led offer undervalues the company. Do you collect?The SportsNation community wants to know if you still collect baseball cards. If so, what is your favorite card and how did you acquire it? Tell us (http://proxy.espn.go.com/chat/mailbagESPN?event_id=14820)

"I believe that the process that led to the signing of the merger agreement was flawed in that the board of directors did not shop the company and thus failed to maximize the competitive dynamics of a sale transaction that would have garnered the highest price available," Ajdler wrote in a letter sent to board members on Tuesday.


The deal was approved in a 7-3 vote by the board with Ajdler and two others voting against the deal. Ajdler was joined by Timothy Brog, president of Pembridge Capital Management LLP, and another board member John Jones. Pembridge had earlier pressed the company to solicit acquisition proposals.


The buyout group, which includes The Tornante Co. LLC, founded by Eisner, and the Chicago-based private equity firm Madison Dearborn Partners LLC, has agreed to pay $9.75 for each Topps share, which represents a premium of 9.4 percent over the stock's Monday closing pricing of $8.91 on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange.


In a sign that some investors think the bidding could go higher, Topps shares rose 90 cents, or 10 percent, to $9.81 on morning trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Its shares have traded between $7.50 and $10 over the past 52 weeks.


The company said in its announcement that it will solicit better offers over the next 40 days.


The deal requires regulatory approval and a vote by Topps shareholders, but the company said it could close by the third quarter.


As part of the merger agreement, Chief Executive Arthur T. Shorin agreed to retire within 60 days of the close of the deal. He would remain as a consultant, according to an SEC filing. Shorin, 70, has been CEO of Topps and its predecessor since 1980, according to the company Web site.


Eisner was CEO of The Walt Disney Co. for two decades until he stepped down in 2005. Disney owns theme parks, movie studios and the ABC, ESPN and Disney TV networks.

Topps, founded in 1938, makes trading cards featuring athletes of Major League Baseball, the NFL and NBA. In addition to Bazooka bubble gum, it owns the Ring Pop and Push Pop brands.
Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press

TNTtoys
03-06-2007, 01:28 PM
I understand now that the deal has been revised from $9.75 per share to $10.25 per share. This is due to an unforeseen revenue spike caused by a market frenzy with the current 2007 baseball set.

The head of the creative department at Topps is quoted with saying "I severely underestimated the impact of superimposing President Bush and Mickey Mantle on the Jeter card. In light of this recent business deal, I would have had my men working day and night at turning in a far superior product. We could have replaced the current Barry Bonds with the Barry Bonds of 1988... We could have changed the 2005 WS Champion White Sox to the Cubs... We could have replaced Brad Penny with Penny Marshall... hell, we could have colored the Orioles uniforms green!"

Now that the card company is part owned by the FORMER CEO of Disney, one can only wonder what would be in store had he still been with Disney... yikes!

Of course, the above content is all fabricated for your amusement!!