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Britain's DCC reviews takeover bid from KKR and Energy Capital Partners (updated)

Updates with background throughout, analyst comment in paragraph 7,9

DCC shares jump 16% after takeover proposal revealed

KKR and Energy Capital Partners have until June 10 to make a firm offer

DCC says no certainty a firm offer will be made

By Ankita Bora and Yamini Kalia

April 29 (Reuters) - Irish Energy distributor DCC DCC.L is reviewing a cash takeover proposal from a consortium comprising U.S. investment firms Energy Capital Partners and KKR KKR.N, it said on Wednesday, sending its shares sharply higher.

London-listed DCC, which operates across Europe, North America and Asia, did not disclose the proposed offer price. KKR declined to comment.

The takeover approach marks the latest private equity pursuit of a UK-listed company, as buyout firms continue to target British and Irish firms trading at relatively low valuations.

Shares of the company, which distributes liquid gas, biofuels, and renewable energy to businesses and households, rose to as much as 62.65 pounds on the news, giving it a market value of about 5.35 billion pounds ($7.22 billion), according to Reuters calculations.

 DCC has been simplifying its operations and sharpening its focus on its core energy business by stepping up acquisitions in Europe's liquid gas markets and divesting non-core units such as healthcare and technology.

Its shares have risen 11% over the past year, but have underperformed the broader FTSE 100 .FTSE, which is up nearly 23% over the same period.

FRUSTRATIONS ABOUT ITS VALUATION DISCOUNT

"I think ultimately there will be a lot of shareholders who have been frustrated by the constant valuation discount on DCC shares whilst it's been on the market," Berenberg analyst James Bayliss told Reuters.

DCC, which supplies mainly off‑grid customers through partnerships with refiners rather than producing energy itself, is also operating in a volatile energy market, where supply constraints due to the Iran war have heightened demand for alternative energy.

 "If you think about the energy trilemma, it is about affordability, availability, and cleanliness of energy," Bayliss said, adding that DCC's services address all three, driving structural tailwinds across its customer base and demand at levels not seen for many years.

 In February, the Dublin-headquartered firm forecast robust profit growth for 2026.

The consortium has until June 10 to make a firm offer or walk away.

($1 = 0.7407 pounds)

(Reporting by Ankita Bora and Yamini Kalia in Bengaluru; Editing by Sumana Nandy, Rashmi Aich and Sharon Singleton)

((Ankita.Bora@thomsonreuters.com;))

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