The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Itochu makes Us$5.4bil bid for rest of Familymart

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TOKYO: Itochu Corp is seeking to take full control of convenienc­e-store chain Familymart Co through a tender offer valued at as much as 580.9 billion yen (Us$5.4bil).

The Japanese trading company, which already owns 50.1% of Familymart, is offering 2,300 yen apiece for the shares it didn’t already own, it said in a statement.

The offer represents a premium of 31% over Wednesday’s closing price of 1,754 yen a share.

Familymart shares settled 23% higher at the close of trading in Tokyo yesterday, their biggest gain ever. The stock didn’t trade during the day, as buy orders far outnumbere­d those to sell.

Familymart’s stock was down about a third for the year before Itochu’s announceme­nt on Wednesday.

Familymart directors said they supported the tender offer, and that shareholde­rs should make their own decision.

Familymart executives said in a conference call that Itochu approached them in February. They had originally intended to discuss the matter with Itochu after the coronaviru­s pandemic died down as they initially expected the impact to be short.

Japan’s trading companies have been increasing their stakes in the country’s biggest convenienc­e store operators as a way to diversify business away from the volatile commoditie­s business.

In 2016, Mitsubishi Corp paid 144 billion yen to purchase a controllin­g stake in Lawson Inc.

The convenienc­e store market in Japan is saturated and dominated by three majors – 7-Eleven, Familymart and Lawson, making business fiercely competitiv­e. Familymart is the country’s second-largest convenienc­e store franchiser, with more than 15,000 locations.

Both companies thought combining resources would help Familymart move more quickly to meet challenges as it pursues digitalisa­tion, a payments business and overseas expansion, said president Takashi Sawada in a call with reporters on Wednesday for the company’s quarterly earnings.

“We want to use Itochu to solve our problems,” he added.

If the tender offer, which runs from July 9 to Aug 24, is successful, Familymart would become a wholly owned subsidiary of Itochu. In 2018, Itochu paid a much higher price – 11,000 yen per share – to boost its stake to 50.1% from about 40.7%.

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