LONDON, June 24, 2026, 12:20 BST
Intertek Group shares traded at 5,805 pence around midday on Wednesday. That put the stock 195 pence, or 3.36%, below EQT’s £60 cash offer. Across 153.9 million shares in issue, the gap is about £300 million — a market price for time and deal risk, not a discount to the often-quoted £61.077 package.
The distinction matters on the dividend payment date. The 107.7-pence final dividend inside the £61.077 figure was paid on Wednesday. Intertek lists May 29 as the ex-dividend date, when new buyers stopped qualifying. A comparison with £61.077 would put the apparent gap at 302.7 pence, 55% above the actual cash spread.
The gross return to £60 is 3.36%. The offer gives a fourth-quarter 2026 or first-quarter 2027 completion window, and cash is due no later than 14 days after the effective date. At the first day of the fourth quarter and the last day of the first quarter, the simple annualised return works out at about 12.4% and 4.4%, respectively, before costs or tax.
A Form 8.3 filed on Tuesday showed Hudson Bay Capital Management added a long equity swap tied to 250,000 Intertek shares at £58.01 on June 22 and cut 989 at £58.00. Its long exposure stood at 1,680,703 shares, or 1.09%. An equity swap is a derivative linked to the share price. The trade is consistent with merger arbitrage — buying a target below an agreed bid — though the filing does not state Hudson Bay’s strategy.
The takeover is structured as a scheme of arrangement, a court-led process. It needs a majority in number of voting scheme shareholders who represent at least 75% by value, plus 75% of votes cast at the general meeting. Director undertakings cover 642,951 shares, or 0.42%. CEO André Lacroix said the bid gives shareholders “cash certainty today”. EQT’s Matthias Wittkowski said the buyer was “committed to investing in Intertek”. Investegate
Morningstar analyst Ben Slupecki said the deal made sense because the market had undervalued Intertek’s assets before EQT’s approaches. Palliser Capital founder and CIO James Smith said: “We are pleased to see this deal agreed and believe it represents a positive outcome for shareholders.” Reuters
BCG puts Intertek in the same global multi-specialist testing category as SGS and Bureau Veritas. If the buyout closes, public investors in that peer group would be left with SIX-listed SGS and Euronext Paris-listed Bureau Veritas. That narrows the listed choice for broad testing, inspection and certification exposure.
But the spread is small beside the break risk. The offer document sets 18 numbered clearance conditions across 13 national or supranational regimes, before shareholder and court steps are counted. The £43.63 close before the offer period is 24.8% below Wednesday’s price, versus 3.36% upside to £60. That is a reference point, not a forecast of a failed-deal price. The financial terms are final unless a third party appears or the Takeover Panel consents to a rise.