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Mumbai:
US hi-tech stock market Nasdaq and state-run United Arab Emirates group Borse
Dubai have reached a deal to acquire Sweden''s OMX, ending a lengthy takeover battle
for the Nordic exchange owner. Nasdaq
and the Borse Dubai said they will jointly take over Nordic market operator OMX,
with Borse Dubai taking 19.99 per cent of Nasdaq Under
the complex agreement, Nasdaq will take Borse Dubai''s stake in OMX. Borse Dubai
will also buy Nasdaq''s 28 per cent holding in the London Stock Exchange. Nasdaq
would take a strategic stake in Dubai International Financial Exchange (DIFX),
the firms added in a statement. Borse
Dubai would follow through on its previously announced 230 kronor ($41) per share
offer for OMX. The 17 August bid valued the group at $3.97 billion ($4.6 billion).
The Nasdaq stock
exchange would then acquire all of Borse Dubai''s OMX shares. Though the UAE
exchange would acquire 19.99 per cent of the shares in Nasdaq, its voting rights
would be restricted to 5 per cent. "Taken
together, these strategic actions will provide us with a footprint unlike any
other exchange, creating a global exchange leader, with operations in key markets
around the world," Nasdaq chief executive Bob Greifeld said. "We are
pleased that Borse Dubai has decided to become a shareholder in Nasdaq. This better
positions New York, as well as the US, to successfully compete with other global
financial markets." The
announcement ended intense speculation over the fate of OMX, with Nasdaq and Borse
Dubai both courting the group in recent months. OMX
operates the stock markets of Copenhagen, Stockholm, Helsinki, Reykjavik, Riga,
Tallinn and Vilnius.
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