The Phnom Penh Post

McDonald’s sells control of China branch for $2B

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US FAST-FOOD giant McDonald’s will sell a controllin­g stake in its China and Hong Kong business for up to $2.08 billion to a consortium including state-owned Citic and the Carlyle Group, it was announced yesterday.

The deal is part of an internatio­nal turnaround plan as McDonald’s struggles with sluggish growth at home.

Citic Limited, Citic Capital Holdings, Carlyle Group and McDonald’s will form a company that will act as franchisee for the chain’s business in mainland China and Hong Kong for 20 years, the companies said in a joint statement.

Citic is a vast Chinese stateowned conglomera­te with interests in businesses ranging from energy and manufactur­ing to real estate.

It said in a statement to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange that the purchase would deepen its exposure to China’s consumer sector, “which is poised to be the main driver of China’s economy for decades to come”.

The burger chain last year announced plans to sell its over 2,600 restaurant­s in China and Hong Kong,after sales took a hit as tensions in the South China Sea hit earnings by US companies in the country.

Its China business also suffered a blow in 2014 after a food safety scandal involving one of its meat suppliers.

Citic and Citic Capital will have a stake of 52 percent, Carlyle will take 28 percent and McDonald’s will retain 20 percent of the new company.

It will focus on growth in China’s smaller regional cities and plans to open more than 1,500 restaurant­s in the mainland and Hong Kong over the next five years.

The burger chain has been overhaulin­g its global structure under chief executive Steve Easterbroo­k to compensate for slower growth in markets such as France and the US, its largest market.

The global restructur­ing plan calls for refranchis­ing 4,000 restaurant­s by the end of 2018, with the long-term goal of franchisin­g 95 percent of its outlets.

The new company will focus on menu innovation and enhanced restaurant convenienc­e, and McDonald’s existing management team will continue to lead the business, the statement said.

Rival empire

McDonald’s opened its first restaurant in mainland China in 1990 and currently employs over 120,000 people, it said, adding that the fastfood chain is the country’s second-largest.

It was one of the largesteve­r China deals for asset manager Carlyle, which has invested more than $7 billion of equity in the world’s second-largest economy, according to the statement.

The deal is expected to be closed in mid-2017 pending regulatory approval.

Rival Yum Brands, owner of KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell, last year split off its $6.9 billion China business into a separate company, Yum China, to focus on its huge but struggling restaurant empire in the country.

 ?? FRED DUFOUR/AFP ?? People walk past a McDonald’s fast-food restaurant in Beijing yesterday.
FRED DUFOUR/AFP People walk past a McDonald’s fast-food restaurant in Beijing yesterday.

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