Epicor Rises the Most in 4 Years on Elliott Offer (Update2)
Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Epicor Software Corp., the supplier of business programs to Barnes & Noble Inc., rose the most in four years in U.S. trading after the second-largest shareholder offered to buy it at a 20 percent premium.
Elliott Associates LP made an unsolicited offer of $9.50 a share in cash, Epicor said in a statement. The shares, which closed at $7.89 yesterday, climbed 13 percent to $8.93 at 4 p.m. New York time in Nasdaq Stock Market composite trading. The gain was Epicor's steepest single-day climb since April 2004.
Elliott owns 10.2 percent of the common stock and $28.7 million in convertible notes, the New York-based hedge fund said today in a regulatory filing.
``We think the main purpose of Elliott's announcement is to put EPIC in play,'' Mark Schappel, a New York-based analyst for Benchmark Co., said in a note to investors. He rates the shares ``hold'' and doesn't own any.
``I don't think that they're likely to take the deal,'' Schappel said in an interview. ``They're not in dire straits and they have plenty of cash.''
The bid will be reviewed and an answer will come in due course, Irvine, California-based Epicor said.
Epicor shares lost 24 percent this year.
To contact the reporter on this story: Matt Jarzemsky in New York at mjarzemsky@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Colleen McElroy at cmcelroy@bloomberg.net.
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