Bangkok Post

New Ahold CEO faces rising pressure to drop takeover defence

- WOUT VERGAUWEN LISA PHAM

AMSTERDAM/LONDON: Royal Ahold Delhaize NV’s incoming chief executive officer, Frans Muller, faces rising pressure to end a takeover defence and become more active in US consolidat­ion.

One of the first tasks awaiting the new CEO will be deciding whether the DutchBelgi­an company should keep its “stichting” legal structure that can block takeover bids without giving shareholde­rs a chance to vote.

Dutch shareholde­r group VEB and activist investor CIAM have demanded a say in whether the grocer should keep the defense.

“Poison pills are bad corporate governance,” wrote Bruno Monteyne, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein, yesterday.

“Ahold needs to gain scale in the US and a good way would be merging its business there with rival Kroger Co,’’ he added after Ahold announced that Muller would replace retiring CEO Dick Boer, 60, in July.

Amazon.com Inc’s acquisitio­n of Whole Foods Market Inc last year has forced retailers worldwide to rethink how best to distribute groceries to customers.

Muller, 57, was deputy CEO and chief integratio­n officer after the merger that formed the company in 2016. Before that, he led Belgium’s Delhaize and helped reach the $10.4 billion deal to combine with its Dutch rival.

Shares of Ahold Delhaize have dropped 12% since the merger as Amazon encroaches into the grocery industry.

The Dutch-Belgian company could play a role in US consolidat­ion as it gets about two-thirds of its revenue from that market at chains including Food Lion and Hannaford.

Barclays values the company’s US assets at €14.4 billion ($17.7 billion) and the European assets at €12.7 billion.

One option would be splitting the company up, according to CIAM, a firm that said it owns “several tens of millions” of euros’ worth of Ahold Delhaize stock.

“There is no synergy between both sides,” chief investment officer Catherine Berjal said in an interview in London last month.

“They need to think about the future. The sector is really in bad shape, it needs to consolidat­e and we want the company to find good ideas and not to hide behind this stichting.”

Ahold Delhaize has said its management and supervisor­y boards have the right to extend the structure without shareholde­r approval. It is set to expire at the end of this year.

The grocer has agreed to discuss the matter at its annual meeting scheduled for next Wednesday, though it won’t go to a vote.

“Valuing a transparen­t approach to our shareholde­rs, we have put the item on the agenda for discussion,” the company said in an emailed response to Bloomberg News.

Jefferies analyst James Grzinic last month reiterated his view that Ahold Delhaize should engage into further US consolidat­ion, following speculatio­n of talks between Kroger and Target Corp.

“The timing is ideal because Ahold Delhaize will get a further 18 months of synergies from the merger, helping it to outperform US peers,’’ he wrote in a March 26 note.

Ahold’s US strategy has been a focus for investors in the past.

The company sold its US Foodservic­e business as well as its Tops chain in 2007, following demands by hedge funds Centaurus Capital Ltd and Paulson & Co that Ahold divest all its US stores.

It merged with Belgium’s Delhaize Group in 2016.

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