Kraft has not changed the terms on the offer, although the value of the offer has deflated since since September, as it includes 0.2589 of new Kraft shares -- and $4.90 in cash -- for every Cadbury share, The New York Times reported Monday. Kraft shares have dropped 4 percent since it approached Cadbury with a buyout offer, causing the value of the offer to diminish, the newspaper said.
Kraft filed the offer with the London Stock Exchange to beat a deadline imposed by British regulators, who said Kraft had until Monday to solidify its position.
With a purchase, Kraft would add valuable products to its lineup and increase inroads into emerging markets, like India, the Times said.
Cadbury Chairman Roger Carr said, "the repetition of a proposal which is now of less value and lower than the current Cadbury share price does not make it any more attractive."
In a statement, Carr said the offer "involves the unattractive prospect of the absorption of Cadbury into a low-growth conglomerate business model."
Copyright 2009 by United Press International.