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Australia-led group bids $6.3bn for logistics firm Asciano

Brookfield Infrastructure Partners chief executive officer Sam Pollock (L) and John Mullen, Asciano Chief Executive Officer, smile following a press conference in Sydney on August 18, 2015

An Australian-led consortium including a Chinese sovereign wealth fund bid US$6.30 billion for ports and rail operator Asciano Thursday, kicking off a bidding war with a Canadian asset manager. Qube Holdings -- leading a group including China's CIC Capital Corporation, the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and investment group Global Infrastructure Partners -- said it had submitted the offer with an implied value of Aus$9.17 per Asciano share. That valued the bid at Aus$8.95 billion. The announcement comes three months after the consortium bought a 19.99 percent stake in the Australian logistics giant and indicated a desire to break up the business. The move is a direct challenge to the Aus$9 billion takeover bid revealed in July by Canadian asset manager Brookfield Infrastructure Partners, which if successful would be the biggest logistics deal in Australian corporate history. Brookfield currently has a stake of just over 20 percent in Asciano. "The official gun has been fired, so we've had this shadow-boxing situation where Brookfield and Qube and its consortium partners have been throwing non-binding bids at each other," IG markets analyst Evan Lucas told AFP. "This is binding, so it's now a set, official price and a bidding war is underway. The winners out of this are Asciano shareholders. They are either going to get a higher price or a good deal, whichever way the board recommends them to go with." Brookfield is still waiting for the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission's approval of its takeover bid. An earlier undertaking was rejected by the corporate watchdog owing to questions about competition issues. Asciano's board said it received and was considering Qube's proposal, but reiterated that it was continuing to unanimously recommend the Brookfield offer at this stage. Asciano shares closed 4.00 percent higher to Aus$8.84 Thursday in Sydney, while Qube ended the day's trade up 3.81 percent to Aus$2.18. Brookfield's offer last year came during a flurry of acquisitions in Australia's transport sector -- including Japan Post Holdings' purchase of Toll Holdings -- as the local dollar weakened and the nation's conservative government pushed for infrastructure spending.