China Daily

Yili eyes major US yogurt firm

Dairy giant plans to spend $850 million on purchase of 100 percent stake in Stonyfield

- By SHI JING in Shanghai and ZHU WENQIAN, YUAN HUI in Hohhot Contact the writers at shijing@chinadaily.com.cn and zhuwenqian@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s biggest dairy producer Yili Industrial Group Co has shown its ambition to consolidat­e its position and expand its production line with its latest overseas acquisitio­n plans.

Yili announced on Wednesday night that it will bid for a 100 percent stake in leading US organic yogurt brand Stonyfield, which is currently owned by French dairy giant Danone. The acquisitio­n will total $850 million, according to Yili.

Fully acquired by Danone in 2014, Stonyfield had an annual sales revenue of $370 million in 2016, with net profit to $50 million. Its production line covers yogurts, smoothies, milk and cream. Danone plans to sell off Stonyfield in order to accelerate the closure of its $10.4 billion acquisitio­nof natural food company White Wave.

Yili is likely to confront strong competitor­s such as PepsiCo and Coca-Cola, according to Credit-Suisse analyst Laurent Grandet.

Xu Ke, vice-president of Yili Group, said that the whole bidding process is quite complicate­d and it is yet unknown when the result will be announced.

The capital market has responded positively to Yili’s acquisitio­n plan. Yili’s price went up 0.92 percent on Thursday to close at 17.58 yuan ($2.54) per share, while the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index went up 0.29 percent.

Industry insiders consider Yili’s intended acquisitio­n of Stonyfield reflects Chinese dairy makers’ growing interest in the low-temperatur­e dairy products market. According to the Dairy Associatio­n of China, the country’s low-temperatur­e dairy product industry, especially pasteurize­d milk, grew by over 20 percent annually in the past three years.

Independen­t dairy analyst Song Liang predicted that low-temperatur­e dairy products will continue to register the fastest pace of growth in 2017 as they will become consumers’ favorite in first and second-tier cities, gradually replacing ultra-high-temperatur­e dairy products.

Yili’s resolve to expand its production line has been quite evident recently. Last October, it announced plans to acquire a 37 percent stake in organic milk producer Inner Mongolia Shengmu Animal Husbandry Co Ltd for 4.6 billion yuan. However, the acquisitio­n plan ended on April 28 after the two companies failed to reach all the preconditi­ons by the due date.

 ?? XINHUA ?? A technician tests a dairy product of Yili Industrial Group Co at the company's innovation lab in Hohhot, capital of the Inner Mongolia automous region.
XINHUA A technician tests a dairy product of Yili Industrial Group Co at the company's innovation lab in Hohhot, capital of the Inner Mongolia automous region.

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