
Pepper Money Ltd (ASX: PPM) shares surged after the company announced that it had received an indicative, non-binding proposal to take it private at $2.60 per share.
At the time of writing, Pepper shares were up 25% to $2.20 but still short of the $2.60 offer price.
The deal could see the non-bank lender taken private in a partnership between its current major shareholders and Challenger Ltd (ASX: CGF), the proposed minority partner in the deal.
At the time of writing, Challenger shares are down 3% as investors digest the implications of the deal.
That divergence between the Pepper Money and Challenger share price reactions is typical of takeover situations in which the acquirer pays a premium to make the deal attractive to shareholders of the acquired company.
What is being proposed?
Following media speculation, Pepper Money confirmed it has received a confidential, non-binding proposal to acquire 100% of the company via a scheme of arrangement, jointly backed by Challenger and Pepper Group, Pepper Money’s existing cornerstone shareholder.
Pepper Group itself is a consortium of investors led by US private equity and private credit giant KKR.
Under the proposal:
- Pepper shareholders (excluding Pepper Group) would receive $2.60 per share in cash, less the FY25 final dividend and any special dividends
- Pepper Group would roll its existing stake into the new private vehicle
- Challenger’s ownership would be capped at 25%, with Pepper Group retaining majority control
Pepper Money’s board has formed an Independent Board Committee, which has granted Challenger exclusivity to conduct due diligence and negotiate the transaction.
There’s no certainty that the deal will be completed, which is why the market has not yet fully priced in the $2.60 offer price for Pepper Money shares.
Why Pepper shareholders are cheering
For Pepper shareholders, the logic is simple.
A $2.60 cash offer represents a meaningful premium to where the stock had been trading prior to the speculation. Pepper Money shares had slipped 30% from their recent November 2025 peak, and so a clean cash exit at a premium is compelling.
A counterargument is that some Pepper Money shareholders could see the deal’s timing and the offer price as somewhat opportunistic, because compared with Pepper’s November 2025 share price of $2.49, the offer is only a 4.4% premium.
There could be more to this before this deal is fully approved and finalised.
Why Challenger investors are more cautious
Challenger’s management framed the potential transaction as strategic and EPS-accretive, but investors are typically cautious of sizeable acquisitions made at a premium.
Challenger’s rationale is, however, quite clear: Pepper Money provides long-duration, higher-yielding fixed income assets, which neatly support Challenger’s retirement and annuities business. Strategically, the fit makes sense.
But as always, the execution and implementation are what count most, and Challenger investors are taking a wait-and-see approach.
Foolish bottom line
Pepper Money’s share price surge and Challenger’s pullback aren’t contradictory; they’re exactly what you’d expect.
Takeover targets usually win immediately. Acquirers have to earn it over time.
If this deal completes, Pepper shareholders likely lock in value today, while Challenger investors are being asked to trust that patient, strategic capital deployment will pay off tomorrow. The market’s verdict so far? One cheers certainty. The other waits for proof.
The post Pepper Money shares pop 25%, Challenger slips 3% on take-private deal appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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Motley Fool contributor Kevin Gandiya has no positions in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended KKR. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Challenger. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.