SoftBank Group filed a draft public tender offer with France's Autorité des Marchés Financiers to acquire BALYO at €3.00 per share. The offer values the warehouse robotics company at approximately €48 million and represents a 37% premium to the three-month volume-weighted average price. BALYO's board established an ad hoc committee—Juliette Favre and Yasmine Fage, both independent directors—to review the proposal and prepare a reasoned opinion for shareholders.
SoftBank already holds 29.5% of BALYO through prior investments, including a €15.6 million placement in 2019 and a €6.5 million convertible note in 2023. The tender targets 100% ownership and includes standard squeeze-out provisions if SoftBank reaches 90% post-offer. BALYO trades on Euronext Growth Paris with a current market capitalization of €35 million, down 64% from its 2018 peak. The company received a Nasdaq delisting notice in October after failing to maintain the $1.00 minimum bid price for thirty consecutive trading days, a compliance deadline it has not cured.
The move consolidates SoftBank's position in autonomous material handling at a moment when warehouse automation spending shows bifurcation. North American capital expenditure on robotics rose 12% year-over-year through Q3 2024, per ABI Research, but early-stage companies without path to profitability face tightening credit windows. BALYO reported €18.3 million in revenue for the twelve months ending June 2024, down 8% year-over-year, with an operating loss of €7.1 million. The company burns approximately €1.5 million per quarter and held €4.2 million in cash at last disclosure. SoftBank's offer provides a clean exit for minority holders while preserving continuity for BALYO's 47 enterprise customers, primarily in automotive and third-party logistics.
The ad hoc committee will retain independent financial and legal advisors, with a formal opinion expected within six weeks under AMF rules. SoftBank's filing does not disclose financing arrangements but likely uses balance sheet cash given the modest outlay. The offer period opens once the AMF publishes its conformity decision, expected in mid-January 2025. Minority shareholders should watch for any competing bids before the AMF's ten-day review window closes, though BALYO's delisting risk and cash position make intervention unlikely.
SoftBank's prior warehouse plays—Berkshire Grey, AutoStore, Symbotic—all traded below their SPAC or IPO prices within eighteen months, suggesting Masayoshi Son learned the discipline of private ownership for subscale automation platforms.