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Becton and Waters to merge in $17.5 billion deal

Waters Corp, a lab equipment manufacturer, will merge with Becton, Dickinson and Company’s Biosciences & Diagnostic Solutions division in a $17.5-billion deal, according to the companies. The merger creates a larger company focused on high volume medical testing.

The deal announced Monday is structured in a Reverse Morris Trust. This allows a company avoid a large tax bill by spinning out a unit it wants to divest, while merging it simultaneously with another company.

The deal's eye-popping value is the combination of the 39.2% shareholding that BD shareholders have in the combined business and the $4 billion cash payment that BD will get at the closing.

Becton’s Biosciences and Diagnostic Solutions unit produces products that are used to detect cancer and infectious diseases. The company is looking to divest this unit in order to focus more on its core medical device business.

In recent years, funding for microbiology and life sciences research has been cut back, which has affected the performance of BD’s biosciences division.

The sale of medical equipment remained strong post-pandemic, due to an increase in demand for outpatient surgeries and other types of surgery.

Waters CEO Udit Btra stated that the merger will double Waters' market addressable to $40 billion. It will also enhance recurring revenue streams, and accelerate expansion into areas like bioseparations and bioanalytical characterisation, as well as multiplex diagnostics.

Waters' stock fell 5.3% in premarket trading following the announcement. Becton stock was slightly down.

Leerink analysts say investors are unlikely to view this deal as attractive near-term, given its higher exposure to microbiology and recent funding cuts.

Waters will take on an additional $4 billion of debt as part of this deal. It is expected to be completed in the first quarter 2026. (Reporting and editing by Anil D’Silva, Mrigank Dahniwala, Shrey Biswas, Padmanabhan Ananthan, in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)