Surely it was an offer? The same as the other over priced offer?
In many respects you're right however, when you sign Heads of Terms on a deal of £5.5m you would expect the deal to go through at that price. Due diligence is to identify that what you're being told about the Company is substantially true.
Court record confirms that SUSU's due diligence wasn't completed in the agreed timescale and yet a counter offer of £2m was made based on 'increased risk to SISU'. Also, no proof of funding was provided by SISU.
It is obvious that due diligence didn't uncover anything untoward. It never does. It is performed by auditors / accountants. In all my years in business I have met accountants that are worth their weight in gold. As for auditors I haven't met one that was worth their fee. The reason for this is that they base their opinion on what they're being told so their hands are tied other than to check the ledgers and tax implications. Pulling the wool over the eyes of an auditor is easy - ask the Board of Enron.
I spoke to a friend of mine who was Finance Director of a £500m company. Counter offer of £2m based on a HoT agreement of £5.5m due to 'increased risk'. "It's easy," he said. "The buyers wanted to pull out."
Excessively low offers to acquire aren't really offers at all. It seems that in 2012 SISU valued the Ricoh at between £25m and £29m being the £5.5m for 50% share in ACL plus the outstanding mortgage that was at least £14m but could have been as high as £19m.
Things then went from £25m to £18m and then to zero and 'sign the Ricoh freehold over to us for nothing and get rid of ACL while you're doing it'. The buyers didn't want to buy and the Higgs Court case confirmed that.