Home Business Toyota Supplier Hit With Criticism Over $33b Deal

Toyota Supplier Hit With Criticism Over $33b Deal

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The world’s top-selling automaker plans to take Toyota Industries private in a complex, multi-part transaction that includes an offer price of 16,300 yen a share.

By Channels Television

Updated June 10, 2025

   

Some investors in Toyota Industries have voiced disapproval of a $33 billion buyout offer on Tuesday, a Reuters report has said.

The 4.7 trillion yen ($33 billion) deal was to take the forklift maker private.

The world’s top-selling automaker plans to take Toyota Industries private in a complex, multi-part transaction that includes an offer price of 16,300 yen a share. The price, some shareholders have said, undervalues the supplier’s intrinsic value and strengthens the founding Toyoda family’s control over the broader group.

The offer has already come under fire from international shareholders, including London-based Zennor Asset Management and Hong Kong-based Oasis Management, fueling criticism that the bid from the Japanese parent, Toyota Motor, was unfair to minority shareholders.

However, on Tuesday, domestic shareholders at what is likely to be the company’s last annual general meeting before it is taken private also expressed their concerns about the plan.

“I don’t think I am the only one who feels the price is too low,” Reuters quoted one of the shareholders as saying at the meeting.

Another said the acquisition would lead to the “domination” of Toyota Industries, one of Toyota’s key suppliers, by the automaker.

The meeting was reported to have lasted for almost two hours, its longest ever, the company said. Toyota Industries’ executives also took some two dozen questions from shareholders, the most ever.

The acquisition would allow Toyota Industries to deepen collaboration with group companies, without concerns of short-term profit targets, as Toyota itself becomes a broader “mobility company”.

Under the deal, a new holding company will be set up. Unlisted real estate company Toyota Fudosan will invest 180 billion yen, while Toyoda, the founder’s grandson, will invest 1 billion yen. Toyota Motor will invest 700 billion yen in non-voting preferred shares.

“This was not a decision that neglected minority shareholders, but rather one that was taken with all the factors in mind,” Toyota Industries’ President Koichi Ito told shareholders.

Oasis, which has shares in both Toyota Motor and Toyota Industries, said on Friday it would push for a higher price.

Zennor and some others have said the price undervalues the substantial real estate on Toyota Industries’s books.

Toyota Industries had 1.5 trillion yen of property, plants and equipment on its balance sheet as of the end of March, a number that reflects the cost paid for the assets, minus depreciation, rather than their current market value.

Toyota Group companies hold at least 39% of Toyota Industries, according to LSEG data, and the deal is widely expected to go through. Shares finished at 16,300 yen on Tuesday.

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