Generic drugmaker Mylan goes hostile in bid for Perrigo
* Mylan (Berlin: 6MY.BE - news) to offer $60 cash plus 2.2 of its own shares
* Perrigo rejects offer again
* Perrigo shares fall 3 pct, Mylan up 2.8 pct
* (Adds Perrigo rejection)
April 24 (Reuters) - Generic drugmaker Mylan NV said on Friday it would take its $31 billion offer for Perrigo Co Plc directly to shareholders, in what is set to be one of the most high-profile hostile takeover attempts of the year.
Mylan, which itself is the target of an unsolicited $40 billion bid from larger rival Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd , said it would offer $60 in cash and 2.2 of its shares for each Perrigo share.
The company's pursuit of Perrigo, a major producer of over-the-counter drugs, is widely seen as an attempt to fend off Teva, the world's biggest maker of generic drugs.
The three-way chase is further evidence that the appetite for healthcare acquisitions continues unabated.
M&A in the industry has hit $193.9 billion so far this year, double the amount in the same period last year.
Mylan, which is legally based in the Netherlands, said on April 8 that it would make a cash-and-share bid that valued Dublin-based Perrigo at $205 per share but did not detail the breakdown between shares and cash to be offered.
The offer announced on Friday works out to about $222 per share, based on Mylan's Thursday close, valuing Perrigo at about $31 billion, according to Thomson Reuters data.
However, Perrigo said the offer valued it at $181.67 per share based on Mylan's unaffected price of $55.31 per share on March 10, the last day of trading before speculation emerged that Israel-based Teva was considering an offer for Mylan.
Mylan's shares have risen by about a third since March 10.
"Today's announcement from Mylan proposes a price that is lower than the previously rejected proposal," Perrigo said.
Perrigo's shares were down 3 percent at $195 in early afternoon trading on Friday, while Mylan's stock was up 2.8 percent at $75.75.
Mylan said its offer was fully financed and not conditional on due diligence.
The cash portion will be financed by a new bridge credit facility arranged by Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS-PB - news) , the company said.
Teva said in an emailed statement that it remained fully committed to its Mylan offer. (Reporting by Ankur Banerjee in Bengaluru, Nadia Damouni in New (KOSDAQ: 160550.KQ - news) York; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Ted Kerr)