By Benjamin Chiou
Date: Monday 27 Jan 2025
(Sharecast News) - European safety-testing giants SGS and Bureau Veritas have announced that discussions to merge the companies have ended without a deal being struck.
"Today, Bureau Veritas announces that these discussions have stopped and did not result in an agreement despite a strong belief in the value of consolidation in the Testing, Inspection and Certification sector," the French company said in a statement.
Bureau Veritas had said in a statement on 15 January that it was in talks with Switzerland's SGS regarding a "potential business combination" following media speculation.
Using market capitalisation figures as of Friday's close, the tie-up would have created a company valued at just under €30bn, with annual revenues of nearly €13bn.
The companies' closest competitor is thought to be British product-testing and certification firm Intertek, valued at £8bn.
SGS's stock, which had been weaker since the initial announcement about merger talks, were up 3.5% at CHF88.02 in Zurich on Monday. Bureau Veritas, which had put in solid gains over January so far, dropped 4.2% to €28.60 in Paris.
Intertek, meanwhile, was trading 1.8% lower at 4,954p in London.
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