oOh!media Draws Second Takeover Bid at $1.45 as Board Holds Out for More
oOh!media receives rival $1.45 takeover offer from I Squared Capital as Board holds firm on value
oOh!media Limited (ASX: OML) is at the centre of a competitive bidding contest after I Squared Capital (ISQ) tabled an unsolicited, non-binding indicative offer of $1.45 per share via scheme of arrangement on 11 May 2026, topping an earlier $1.40 per share proposal from Pacific Equity Partners (PEP) announced on 29 April 2026. Both offers are conditional and non-binding. The Board has unanimously rejected both as undervaluing the company, yet has granted limited due diligence access to each party to invite higher revised bids, while simultaneously pausing its on-market share buyback programme.
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Two competing offers on the table — and the Board wants more
What each proposal says
| Bidder | Offer Price (A$/share) | Structure | Status | Announced |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I Squared Capital (ISQ) | $1.45 | Scheme of arrangement | Non-binding, conditional | 11 May 2026 |
| Pacific Equity Partners (PEP) | $1.40 | Scheme of arrangement | Non-binding, conditional | 29 April 2026 |
Both proposals are conditional on the satisfactory completion of due diligence and entry into binding transaction documentation on acceptable terms. Investors should note a specific adjustment clause attached to the ISQ proposal: the $1.45 offer price will be reduced by the amount of any future dividends or other distributions paid to shareholders before completion.
Why the Board said no — for now
The Board of Directors considered both proposals in conjunction with its advisers and reached a unanimous determination: neither proposal adequately reflects the intrinsic value of oOh!media. The Board has formally informed both PEP and ISQ that it does not intend to recommend to shareholders any formal binding offer at or below the value of their respective non-binding indicative proposals.
Critically, this rejection of the current prices does not signal a rejection of a transaction altogether. The Board has determined it is prepared to provide both PEP and ISQ with access to a limited amount of due diligence information, subject to the entry into satisfactory non-disclosure agreements (NDAs). The purpose is to enable each party to assess whether it can put forward a revised proposal that may be capable of the Board’s recommendation.
The competitive field may be wider still. oOh! has confirmed it is also engaging with certain other unnamed third parties, noting it may potentially receive change of control proposals from one or more of those parties. The company stated it is open to engaging with all parties to assess whether any proposal capable of Board recommendation may emerge, keeping the competitive tension in play.
What a scheme of arrangement means for OML shareholders
A scheme of arrangement is a court-approved acquisition process that differs materially from a standard takeover bid. Understanding the distinction matters for investors assessing potential outcomes.
Key things to know about a scheme of arrangement:
- A scheme requires approval from shareholders (typically 75% of votes cast at the scheme meeting) as well as judicial approval from the Federal Court.
- If the scheme is approved, the acquirer obtains 100% of the company’s shares, meaning all shareholders receive the cash consideration, with no minority shareholders left behind.
- Unlike a standard takeover bid, a scheme is structured as an “all or nothing” transaction, which is why private equity acquirers often prefer the structure.
- If a revised, Board-recommended scheme were ultimately put to oOh! shareholders, they would receive a cash exit at whatever the final agreed price is, making the Board’s current valuation stance directly relevant to the per-share outcome investors would receive.
The Board has been explicit that it will not recommend any offer at or below the current indicative prices, so any scheme that does proceed to a shareholder vote is likely to be at a higher figure than either proposal currently on the table.
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What investors should watch as the bidding process unfolds
The Board’s confidence signals potential upside
The Board’s unanimous rejection of both proposals is a public negotiating position, supported by adviser input, asserting that OML shares are worth more than $1.45. Investors should treat this as a signal that management and directors believe the company’s intrinsic value has not yet been reflected in either indicative price.
That valuation confidence rests on oOh!’s position as a leading Out of Home media company with an extensive network of digital and static assets across Australia and New Zealand, spanning roadsides, retail centres, airports, train stations, bus stops, office towers, and universities. The scale and diversity of that network is the asset base underpinning the Board’s valuation argument.
The decision to pause the on-market share buyback programme is also worth noting. While it removes a near-term support mechanism for the share price, it signals the Board is directing its full attention to the strategic process rather than routine capital management, a tactical trade-off investors should factor into their assessment.
Key uncertainties to keep in mind
The situation remains fluid. Key open questions investors should monitor include:
- Will ISQ or PEP return with a higher, revised proposal following their limited due diligence access?
- Will any of the unnamed third parties currently being engaged submit a competing offer?
- At what price level would the Board consider recommending a formal binding proposal to shareholders?
- What is the timeline? No binding deal exists at this stage, and there is no certainty that any indicative proposal will result in a revised offer, let alone one the Board would recommend.
The Board has committed to updating the market in accordance with its continuous disclosure obligations as the process develops. This is an evolving situation, and investors should expect further announcements as engagement with PEP, ISQ, and any other parties progresses.
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