SoftBank Group filed a draft public tender offer with France's Autorité des Marchés Financiers for BALYO, the Arcueil-based warehouse robotics company, in a move that signals Vision Fund's continued appetite for European automation infrastructure. BALYO's board responded within hours by establishing an ad hoc committee composed of independent directors Juliette Favre and Yasmine Fage to evaluate the proposal. The filing price remains undisclosed pending AMF clearance.
BALYO has traded thinly on Euronext Growth since its 2017 listing, with market capitalization hovering near €45 million through November. The company manufactures autonomous forklifts and pallet movers for warehouse environments, competing directly with Raymond Corporation and Jungheinrich in the self-guided vehicle segment. Revenue for fiscal 2023 reached €22.3 million, down 14 percent from the prior year, with operating losses widening to €8.1 million as European logistics capital expenditure softened. SoftBank's existing stake in BALYO sits at approximately 24 percent, acquired through a €15 million equity injection in 2019 when the robotics thesis centered on last-mile fulfillment density.
The timing aligns with SoftBank's broader pivot toward hard automation assets after exiting consumer-facing logistics plays. Vision Fund 2 has deployed $1.8 billion into European industrial technology since Q2 2023, with warehouse automation accounting for roughly 40 percent of that capital. BALYO's customer base includes Carrefour and Geodis, both of which have expanded autonomous material handling trials in the past eighteen months as European labor costs in warehouse operations climbed 6.7 percent year-over-year. A full acquisition would give SoftBank direct manufacturing capability in the EU, bypassing tariff exposure on imported Chinese robotics while positioning for contract wins tied to EU reshoring mandates. The ad hoc committee structure suggests BALYO's board anticipates a negotiation window rather than immediate acceptance, particularly given the stock's 38 percent decline since January.
Operators should track two events. First, the AMF's clearance letter typically posts within 25 to 35 business days of a draft filing, placing the formal offer window in mid-January 2025. Second, BALYO's Q4 earnings release, scheduled for late January, will clarify whether order flow from Carrefour's expanded Marseille distribution center justifies a premium above recent trading levels. Any competing bid would surface during the AMF review period, though BALYO's operational losses and narrow investor base make a rival offer unlikely.
The Favre-Fage committee appointment is standard French governance for minority squeeze-outs, but their evaluation will hinge on whether SoftBank offers a control premium above €3.20 per share, the level at which institutional holders last added positions in September. BALYO's technology moat remains intact, but the revenue compression reflects order cancellations from logistics operators deferring automation spend until EU freight volumes stabilize.