The Asian Age

P& G’s vitamin boost could signal more deals

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London/ Chicago, April 20: Procter & Gamble’s $ 4.2 billion deal for Merck’s vitamin and supplement­s business is the latest example of a major consumer company stocking up on health- related products.

The US- based maker of Tide detergent and Gillette razors announced the deal on Thursday, giving it brands such as Seven Seas vitamins and expanding its portfolio of healthcare products.

Just last month, cleaning product maker Clorox Co agreed to buy multivitam­in company Nutranext for $ 700 million. And in December, Nestle SA paid $ 2 billion for Atrium Innovation­s.

The moves show how global consumer goods companies are looking to new, interestin­g areas to offset flagging growth in their core businesses.

The vitamins and supplement­s sector is attractive due to the emergence of new brands marketing themselves digitally and selling directly online to young consumers, said investment banker William Hood William Hood & Co.

“It’s what the millennial­s are buying and how they’re buying it,” Mr of Hood said. “Large companies are realising they need to figure it out.”

A spokeswoma­n for P& G declined to comment on the company’s strategy to expand its vitamins, minerals and supplement­s business. P& G already owns consumer health brands including Vick’s, Metamucil

Bismol.

Globally, the vitamin and supplement­s category has grown between 5 and 7 percent annually for the past five years, according to Euromonito­r.

The category is very fragmented, with market leader Amway Corp having and Pepto- only 3.6 percent share, Euromonito­r data showed. That implies a consolidat­or could easily boost margins by building scale.

Consumer goods firm Reckitt Benckiser has owned Schiff, maker of MegaRed tablets for heart health and Airborne for immunity, for five years. It was a very different business to other health or home goods, said CEO Rakesh Kapoor on a postearnin­gs call in February, adding that sales and margins were improving after some stumbles.

“This is a category which is here to stay. It is one of the single largest categories in health,” he said.

P& G was in talks with Pfizer about buying the US drugmaker’s consumer health business, CNBC reported earlier this month. Pfizer hoped to bring in $ 20 billion through an auction for the business, which includes Centrum vitamins and Advil painkiller­s.

The auction hit a roadblock after GSK and Reckitt Benckiser dropped out of the running.

When asked about its interest in Pfizer on Thursday, P& G chief executive David Taylor declined to comment.

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