by Dr. Sherry Cooper
Chief Economist, BMO Capital Markets, BMO Nesbitt Burns & Harris Bank
The recent wave of foreign
takeovers of Canadian companies
has unleashed a fl ood of opinion
on the various merits, or demerits,
of this seemingly unstoppable trend. This year alone,
more than $60 billion proposed or completed foreign acquisitions
of major Canadian names have been announced,
including Inco, Falconbridge, ATI, Dofasco, Intrawest, Hudson's
Bay, Sleeman and Vincor. Given the sheer scale of these
consolidations, it is hardly surprising that the hand-wringing
is intensifying. However, at least one consolation is that, with
the TSX close to all-time highs and the Canadian dollar still
close to a 30-year high, buyers are generally paying premium
prices for these companies—the real time for hand-wringing
was during the wave of takeovers in 2001-02, when the
loonie was limping close to 60 cents, equity valuations were
hobbled, and Canadian companies went cheap.
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