Segro, the FTSE 100 warehouse and industrial property giant, has turned down a multibillion-pound takeover approach from a major US industrial property group.
The company rejected the offer, which was structured as an all-share deal, signalling that its board does not believe the terms reflected adequate value for shareholders.
The rebuffed approach has reignited a broader conversation about whether UK-listed property companies are being systematically undervalued by public markets.
Segro trades on the London Stock Exchange under the ticker SGRO and is one of the largest real estate investment trusts in the United Kingdom.
The industrial and logistics property sector has attracted significant interest from overseas buyers in recent years, drawn by strong demand for warehouse space linked to e-commerce growth.
UK-listed property firms have frequently traded at discounts to the net asset value of their underlying portfolios, making them attractive targets for well-capitalised foreign acquirers.
Shareholders in Segro are reported to be pushing for an improved offer, suggesting investor appetite for a deal has not entirely evaporated following the initial rejection.
The board’s decision to rebuff the approach without engaging publicly on terms puts pressure on both sides to clarify their positions in the weeks ahead.
All-share takeover structures can be contentious because they require target company shareholders to accept equity in the acquirer rather than an immediate cash return.
For a company of Segro’s scale and strategic importance within the UK logistics market, any successful acquirer would need to make a compelling case on valuation and long-term operational direction.
The situation reflects a wider tension facing London-listed companies, which have increasingly found themselves in the crosshairs of overseas predators seeking undervalued assets.
Market watchers will be monitoring whether the US suitor returns with a revised and potentially sweetened proposal, or whether Segro’s rejection brings this particular approach to a permanent close.
