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Court Blocks ABN Amro's LaSalle Sale

Thursday, May 03, 2007 3:39:50 PM
By TOBY STERLING

Lawyers of the shareholders group VEB, Paul Coenen, left, and Jurjen Lemstra, right, embrace as they celebrate in the courtroom in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, Thursday May 3, 2007. A Dutch court ordered ABN Amro to freeze the US$21 billion (15.43 billion euro) sale of its U.S. subsidiary LaSalle to Bank of America Corp., saying the company must seek shareholder approval for the move. The ruling was a setback for ABN Amro's management, which was determined to accept a buyout offer by Barclays PLC and shed the Chicago-based bank, holding off a higher hostile takeover bid by a three-bank consortium. The court said the sale of LaSalle was so interwoven with the Barclays takeover bid that it should have been put to the shareholders for a vote. ABN had said the deal was too small to demand shareholder approval. (AP Photo/Bas Czerwinski)AMSTERDAM, Netherlands (AP) - A Dutch court blocked ABN Amro's planned sale of a Chicago bank on Thursday, a ruling that makes it more likely a group led by Royal Bank of Scotland will capture ABN Amro in the industry's largest takeover battle.

The court said ABN Amro must seek shareholder approval before it can sell its U.S. subsidiary LaSalle to Bank of America Corp. The ruling was a major setback for ABN Amro management, which had planned to sell LaSalle for $21 billion and then sell the rest of the company to Britain's Barclays PLC for about $91 billion.

The ruling increases chances that a three-bank consortium led by Royal Bank of Scotland PLC will win the bidding war for the Netherlands' biggest bank. The group has suggested a purchase valued at $98.5 billion.


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