- Grubhub may fetch as much as $75 per share in an Uber takeover, according to a Wednesday note from Barclays.
- That's a roughly 25% premium from where shares of the food delivery company traded at Tuesday's close.
- "
UBER potentially doing this before the industry acceleration is priced into GRUB shares (and before UBER's ride-hail business recovers) is opportunistic, in our view," a group of analysts led by Deepak Mathivanan wrote. - Still, a deal might not come to fruition. On Wednesday, CNBC's David Faber reported that Uber rejected Grubhub's all-stock proposal, as the two companies remained at odds over price.
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Grubhub could get as much as $75 per share in an Uber takeover, according to a Wednesday note from Barclays.
That's a roughly 25% premium from where shares of the food-delivery platform traded at Tuesday's close.
"In addition to meaningful upside, we note that this deal allows GRUB shareholders to participate in what we think could be a strong ride-hail industry recovery in 2020-2021," a group of analysts led by Deepak Mathivanan wrote.
Still, a deal might not come to fruition. On Wednesday, CNBC's David Faber reported that Uber rejected Grubhub's all-stock proposal, as the two companies remain at odds over price. Shares of Grubhub fell more than 7% during intraday trading Wednesday.
A merger between Uber and Grubhub makes sense, the Barclays analysts said, citing "the meaningful opportunity for both revenue and cost synergies."
If Uber does pay $75 per share, the total transaction would be about $7.2 billion, according to the note. Barclays raised its Grubhub price target to $79 from $55.
The firm kept its Uber price target flat at $36, but noted that if a deal were formally announced it could see shares of the ride-hailing company reach its upside valuation of $43 per share.
Mathivanan continued: "UBER potentially doing this before the industry acceleration is priced into GRUB shares (and before UBER's ride-hail business recovers) is opportunistic, in our view."
Grubhub has gained 24% year-to-date through Tuesday's close.
Read the original article on Business Insider