SoftBank Group filed a draft public tender offer for BALYO with the Autorité des Marchés Financiers, marking the formal start of France's regulatory review process for the warehouse robotics acquisition. BALYO's board responded by establishing an ad hoc committee composed of Juliette Favre and Yasmine Fage, both independent directors, to evaluate the proposed transaction. The AMF filing moves the deal from strategic interest into structured review, typically spanning 60 to 90 days before clearance or rejection.
BALYO manufactures automated guided vehicle systems for warehouse logistics, positioning squarely inside SoftBank's robotics and automation thesis. The company has struggled with profitability since its 2017 Euronext Paris listing, posting consecutive operating losses as capital requirements for robotic deployment exceeded revenue growth. SoftBank already holds a minority stake acquired through prior funding rounds, making this a consolidation rather than a cold approach. The tender structure suggests SoftBank intends full operational control rather than portfolio stake expansion, consistent with Vision Fund's recent pivot toward majority positions in automation infrastructure.
The timing aligns with two broader shifts. First, warehouse automation valuations compressed 40% to 60% across public and private markets since 2022, creating acquisition windows for patient capital with long deployment horizons. Second, SoftBank has quietly exited minority positions in European logistics tech over the past 18 months, redeploying into majority-controlled automation plays where unit economics improve with scale. BALYO's installed base across European distribution networks gives SoftBank a manufacturing and service footprint that complements existing robotics holdings without regulatory overlap in North American markets.
The independent committee appointment follows French governance protocol for controlling shareholder transactions, standard but not trivial. Favre and Fage will retain external advisors—likely Rothschild or Lazard on the financial side, given their AMF tender work—and issue a formal opinion before the offer opens. Their assessment will hinge on whether SoftBank's price reflects BALYO's embedded value in long-term logistics contracts versus its recent trading range, which has been 70% below its listing price. Minority shareholders hold roughly 35% of the float, enough to complicate the squeeze-out threshold if the committee's opinion leans skeptical.
Allocators should watch for the AMF's preliminary response, expected within 10 business days of filing, and the committee's formal opinion, typically published three weeks before the offer opens. SoftBank's pricing guidance will surface in the AMF-cleared offer document, revealing whether this consolidates a distressed asset or pays a premium for strategic control. French tender rules require SoftBank to hold the offer open for 25 trading days minimum, with extension provisions if acceptance thresholds aren't met in the initial period.
The real tell will be whether SoftBank simultaneously announces governance changes or operational integration plans before the AMF review concludes, signaling confidence in clearance versus a placeholder filing subject to renegotiation.