Coca-Cola makes $5-billion bet on coffee market
GENEVA — Coca-Cola Co. is making an audacious move into coffee and retail outlets with the 3.9 billion-pound (US$5.1 billion) purchase of U.K. chain Costa, its biggest acquisition in eight years that pushes the soda pioneer into the fiercely competitive java market.
The soft-drinks company swooped in after Whitbread Plc announced a plan in April to spin off the business. The transaction gives Coca-Cola instant heft in a business from which it was all but absent, with 3,800 stores in 32 countries and a foothold in China. Highlighting Coke’s desire to close the deal, Whitbread CEO Alison Brittain said the two sides signed just minutes before the announcement, after Coke first approached the other party in June. “It’s been a very fast transaction,” Brittain said on a call with journalists and analysts.
And for Whitbread investors, it’s a deal they cheered on, with the shares soaring the most in almost two decades, even as Coke shares were muted. A spinoff would have initially yielded smaller returns and might have taken as long as two years.
The Costa deal opens a new business line for a company synonymous with fizzy, sugary beverages like Coca-Cola, Sprite, or Fanta, underscoring the pressure to find new areas of growth as consumer tastes change. Archrival PepsiCo Inc. agreed this month to buy SodaStream Ltd., a maker of carbonated-water dispensers, for $3.2 billion. CocaCola chief executive officer James Quincey said the Costa transaction is a “serious and significant investment” in hot beverages, a market that still remains largely fragmented.
Coke’s approach was unsolicited, as the company was keen to get a foot in the door before Costa was snapped up by one of the giant players in the coffee business, a person familiar with the matter said. Coke is keen to leverage Costa’s global reach as it becomes a retail brand owner for the first time, the person said.
Quincey touted the benefits of having a retail platform with Costa because it supports the brand and creates growth in so-called “immediate consumption” outlets that are stationed anywhere from supermarkets to airports. Costa would also be able to expand into ready-to-drink categories using Coke’s expertise and marketing heft, making the two businesses “remarkably complementary.”
Quincey’s plans for Coke could include other international acquisitions as he seeks to revive annual sales and broaden the focus from a single brand, the person said.
Coke is under pressure to establish itself in new markets, with annual sales that have been in decline since 2012. Still, the Atlanta-based company is entering the coffee-shop market at a time when competitors such as Starbucks Corp. and JAB have already cornered many key locations.
Coke was little changed, slipping 0.2 per cent to $44.85 at 9:52 a.m. in New York.
Whitbread shares rose as much as 19 per cent. It had said in April that it would spin off Costa as an independent publicly traded company, turning its focus to its Premier Inn hotel operations under pressure from activist investors.
The sale will yield a “substantial premium” to the value that would have been created through a spinoff, Whitbread said, adding it will return most of the proceeds to its shareholders.
Whitbread bought Costa in 1995, when it had 39 shops, for 19 million pounds. Since then, the market in the traditionally teadrinking U.K. has boomed.
The number of branded coffee outlets in the U.K. rose by 643 to 7,421 in 2017, according to market researcher Allegra Strategies Ltd.