ZIM Integrated Shipping Services stock jumped 34% to $29.70 in pre-market trading Tuesday after German shipping giant Hapag-Lloyd announced it would acquire the Israeli container shipping company for $4.2 billion. The deal values ZIM at $35 per share in cash.
The acquisition price represents a 58% premium to ZIM’s closing price on Friday. Markets were closed Monday for Presidents Day. The premium climbs to 126% when measured against ZIM’s stock price on August 8, before initial takeover reports emerged.
ZIM Integrated Shipping Services Ltd., ZIM
Hapag-Lloyd confirmed the deal Monday after announcing Sunday it was in advanced talks to buy ZIM. The German company’s Frankfurt-listed shares rose 4.7% to 115 euros Tuesday morning after dropping 8% Monday.
Hapag-Lloyd plans to fund the acquisition through existing cash reserves and external financing of up to $2.5 billion. The transaction requires approval from ZIM shareholders and relevant regulatory authorities.
Israel holds a golden share in ZIM that allows it to control major ownership decisions. As part of the deal, this special stake will transfer to a carved-out container liner business with 16 vessels owned by Israeli private equity fund FIMI. The new entity will be called “New ZIM.”
Financial terms of the FIMI transaction were not disclosed. The arrangement ensures Israel maintains direct global maritime connections through the carved-out business.
The acquisition will cement Hapag-Lloyd’s position as the world’s fifth-largest container shipping company. The combined fleet would consist of more than 400 vessels. ZIM operates in over 90 countries and serves 300 ports worldwide.
JPMorgan analysts noted the deal would boost Hapag-Lloyd’s global market share from 7% to just under 9%. The acquisition allows the German shipper to add capacity without lengthy investment in new vessel orders. Delivery slots at shipyards remain limited in the near term.
The shipping industry has seen freight rates and container volumes decline recently. Mergers offer companies a faster path to increase overall capacity compared to building new vessels.
The deal triggered strong opposition in Israel. ZIM workers at the company’s Haifa headquarters launched a strike Sunday that remained ongoing. Management entered talks with the union to minimize disruption.
Haifa mayor Yona Yahav called the transaction problematic for national security. He argued that transferring ownership to foreign hands poses risks even with Israeli investment fund involvement. Yahav urged the Israeli government to block the deal.
Hapag-Lloyd CEO Rolf Habben Jansen acknowledged the concerns but defended the acquisition as compelling. Israel’s competition authority announced it would review the takeover.
ZIM said in November it had been reviewing strategic options for several months after receiving a non-binding takeover proposal. The company was valued at nearly $2.7 billion as of Friday’s close.
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