Avis Budget Raises Offer For Dollar Thrifty - Business Travel News

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Avis Budget Raises Offer For Dollar Thrifty

September 02, 2010 - 10:50 AM ET

By Michael B. Baker

Avis Budget Group on Thursday upped the cash portion of its offer to acquire Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group and rebuffed analysis Hertz issued earlier this week that Avis Budget would face more difficulty with antitrust approval than Hertz in the acquisition.

Under its new offer, Avis Budget will pay shareholders $40.75 cash per share, instead of the previously offered cash portion of $39.25 per share, along with 0.6543 shares of Avis Budget stock, which Avis Budget said is a 22 percent premium over the Hertz Global Holdings' offer. Hertz in April signed an agreement with Dollar Thrifty to acquire it at $40 per share, or about $1.2 billion, and Avis Budget posed its initial counteroffer in July.

"The Avis Budget offer is clearly superior to the Hertz offer in the two ways that matter: We are offering a substantially higher price and a more meaningful divestiture commitment," Avis Budget said in a statement.

Hertz, meanwhile, issued a presentation on Tuesday saying that an Avis Budget/Dollar Thrifty merger faces a higher antitrust risk than a Hertz/Dollar Thrifty merger. Hertz said pricing data show that an Avis Budget acquisition would give Avis Budget and Enterprise—through the Budget, Dollar, Thrifty, Alamo and Enterprise brands—total control of the airport leisure segment.

"If Avis Budget merges with Dollar Thrifty, all of these brands and, thus, the value leisure segment, will be controlled by either Avis or Enterprise, and that's a bad deal for car rental customers," Hertz chairman and CEO Mark Frissora said in a statement. "One can only conclude that Avis Budget knows it will have a difficult, if not impossible task, to finalize a merger with Dollar Thrifty without divesting a large brand or without a revenue carve-out, perhaps exceeding well over $500 million."

In its statement today, Avis Budget countered that Hertz and Avis Budget have similar airport and leisure revenue shares and that Hertz competes at Dollar Thrifty's price point through its relationship with AAA.

"In its update, Hertz cherry-picks data and time periods and uses deeply flawed modeling to present baseless and inflated divestiture numbers for an Avis Budget transaction," Avis Budget said in its statement. "Proper economic analysis shows that Hertz and Avis Budget are comparably competitive with Dollar Thrifty, and Hertz invents new industry segmentation, artificially grouping Dollar and Thrifty together with Budget to try to manufacture an antitrust issue, knowing full well that Budget and Alamo are positioned as midtier brands while Dollar, Thrifty and Enterprise—on all relevant metrics—are in a value segment that falls below the midtier."

Dollar Thrifty shareholders will vote whether to approve Hertz's offer on Sept. 16. Avis Budget said it would sign its merger agreement within five days of that meeting should shareholders reject Hertz's offer.

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