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Jacobs Engineering Agrees to Buy Sverdrup

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From Times Staff and Wire Reports

Jacobs Engineering Group Inc. of Pasadena on Wednesday agreed to buy closely held engineering firm Sverdrup of St. Louis for about $200 million in cash.

The combination would form the sixth-largest construction and engineering company in the U.S. The agreement must be approved by Sverdrup shareholders.

Jacobs said that Sverdrup shareholders could realize an additional $30 million during the next three years if the price of Jacobs’ shares rise above certain thresholds, which were not revealed.

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Jacobs shares rose 19 cents to close at $37.25 on the New York Stock Exchange. The agreement was announced after the close of U.S. trading.

The price of Jacobs’ stock has jumped 50% in the last year, and 25% since October, as speculation mounted about a possible merger.

Jacobs had sales of $2.1 billion in fiscal 1998 and has 18,000 employees worldwide. Sverdrup said it has 5,600 employees and 1998 sales of about $1 billion.

Last month, the two companies said that they were in talks and that a merger would give the combined companies the “critical mass” needed to offer clients a broader range of services. Jacobs, with workers in 39 locations worldwide, is a leader among companies that design and build complex, large-scale projects such as factories, petrochemical plants, utility projects and the like. It also handles major contamination-cleanup jobs.

The merger would also lift Jacobs’ annual revenue to nearly $3 billion, and give it more than 23,000 employees. Jacobs’ overall market value is about $950 million.

In a statement, the companies said that a combination would create a full-service firm that would be able to handle all aspects of major projects, from design to construction to the operation of projects and facilities.

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The transaction is expected to close in January.

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