Bayer’s Stock Has Lost 44% Of Its Value Since They Bought Monsanto

in #news5 years ago

 Bayer’s stock price fell to a seven year low this week, after the company lost a $2 billion lawsuit over claims that the weedkiller Roundup causes cancer. Roundup weedkiller is a product that was developed by the controversial biotech corporation Monsanto, but the company was purchased by Bayer for $66 Billion in 2016. Along with the acquisition of the extremely profitable company, Bayer has also inherited a long list of lawsuits and reputation problems.Bayer’s stock has been in a freefall all year, as more bad news about Roundup reaches the public. The company’s stock is down by more than 44% since the acquisition of Monsanto.

Roundup contains a chemical called glyphosate, which has been shown in many studies to cause cancer. Despite these findings, the EPA has concluded that the chemical is safe, citing other contradictory studies. However, as an Intercept investigation revealed, the vast majority of those contradictory studies were commissioned by Monsanto. 

The data that the EPA was using to determine the safety of glyphosate was actually provided by Monsanto, which represents an obvious conflict of interest.As the expenses from the Roundup lawsuits began to mount, Bayer shareholders began to question the wisdom of the Monsanto acquisition.

Earlier this year, Bayer shareholder Christian Strenger, filed a motion of no confidence in Bayer’s board complaining of negligence on the part of Bayer CEO Werner Baumann in the Monsanto acquisition.Strenger pointed to the “almost complete failure to deliver the key objectives presented by Baumann in May 2016 for the Monsanto acquisition.”

“Mr. Baumann from Bayer always refers to 800 opinions that glyphosate is a safe product. But the big issue is how was it applied, and was it sold properly with sufficient warning signs. [Bayer] should have insisted. These were not military secrets. Bayer should have told Monsanto, ‘Either you get the DOJ to permit disclosure, or we’re not going to proceed with the transaction,‘” Strenger said, according to Fortune.

Strenger accused the decision-makers at Bayer of being “lenient with a proper analysis of the legal situation.”

Among other complaints, the no confidence motion pointed to the elimination of 12,000 jobs at the end of November 2018, which is believed to be a result of the Monsanto acquisition. This is especially frustrating to shareholders considering that Bayer CEO Werner Baumann promised that the Monsanto deal would create more jobs at the company.

A spokesperson for Bayer has dismissed these concerns stating that the company’s board of directors “performed this risk assessment based on an information and update process which was in all respects adequate for an acquisition of such a scale.”

The spokesperson went on to say that, “Of course, in the context of the acquisition, the board of management also reviewed the risks connected with Monsanto’s glyphosate business. This risk assessment clearly showed that, when used as directed, the products of Monsanto containing glyphosate are safe. Based on the views held by regulatory authorities worldwide and scientists, the board of management assessed the legal risks in connection with the use of glyphosate as low.”

Last week, the French newspaper Le Monde, reported that Bayer hired the public relations firm Fleishman-Hillard to help them launch a counter-offensive against media critics. The firm reportedly compiled a list of over 200 journalists, politicians, and scientists, with detailed descriptions of their opinions on Monsanto.  The lists also included the phone numbers, addresses and, personal interests of these individuals. This type of activity is illegal under the European data protection law, so Bayer has since distanced themselves from the firm, and made an apology where they attempted to place responsibility on the firm. 

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"...the board of management assessed the legal risks in connection with the use of glyphosate as low."

This indicates to me that the downward slide isn't over for Bayer. There will be continuing fallout from the ongoing tortuous action regarding Monsanto's blatant disregard of public health that Bayer has assumed. If I held Bayer stock today, I'd sell it, to avoid that slide. Not holding Bayer, I'll await a significant drop from bad news that certainly seems to be overdue before jumping in.

This isn't advice of any kind, just my personal feeling regarding the development of the legal landscape regarding the specific issues the board failed to protect it's investors from. I reckon there's going to be a lengthy legal battle between stockholders and Bayer management regarding that failure, and also further legal action regarding much public harm that hasn't yet been resolved, including class actions from several directions, including decimation of species diversity that dumping glyphosate has directly caused.

There's fallout and a reckoning due that hasn't even been glimpsed yet, or at least publicly acknowledged, by the directors of Bayer.

Thanks!

I am unsure of the Monsanto acquisition was as a PR move for monsanto or as a way to make lawsuits harder.

Monsanto's, and thus Bayer's stock should lose 99% of its value.

Some nefarious is happening, and i do not like it.


Now, what should be shouted loudly is

Your Beer is at Stake!

Beer manufacturers in The US have had to switch to organic grains because the non-organic grains have too much glyphosate and its killing the beer yeasts.

So, your choice America, beer or Monsanto.

Good.

Brilliant, I hope the stock value continues to plummet in light of Bayer & Monsanto's dark and criminal histories.

Yeah, it just sucks it seems like they have so much power.

Same thing with Boeing. It has been nice to watch them suffer in the markets recently, but their weapons business is so huge they will still survive even if they are left out of the commercial airliner market lol

Very true, I'm sure Bayer lawyers will make sure that litigation goes on for decades before any of the plaintiffs see a dime from Monsanto.
Lol, that's true. Boeing just elected uber war-monger Nikki Haley to their board and now have their long time CEO Shanahan as DefSec ... they're gonna be fine. Now, all they need is some help from the WH generating new wars. They sure are trying their darndest.

The people you noted are part of the reason Boeing will survive. Boeing provides a the alphabet agencies with access to their data centers.

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Bayer shall be eradicate from the market for there evil deeds. Hope more investors will retract and never came back. This is a good news for us citizens and a warning for other company out there

The bigger they are the harder they will fall.

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