Bangkok Post

Couche-Tard’s $20bn Carrefour bid gets snub

- WILLIAM HOROBIN ANGELINA RASCOUET

A $20 billion takeover proposal by Alimentati­on Couche-Tard Inc for France’s Carrefour SA faces initial government opposition, casting doubt on prospects for the transatlan­tic retail deal.

“The pandemic has demonstrat­ed the importance of domestic control over the food supply,’’ Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said.

Carrefour and other grocers have faced surges in demand during lockdowns, with consumers clearing shelves of some items such as flour.

“From this point of view, the idea of Carrefour being bought by a foreign competitor — on the face of it, I am not in favour of this deal,” Le Maire said on

France 5 television.

While the government has the power to formally block the takeover, the comments may also indicate that officials want to set conditions before deciding whether to clear the deal.

Le Maire’s remarks were “rather a posture to be invited to the negotiatin­g table, in our view,” Clement Genelot, an analyst at Bryan Garnier & Co, wrote in a note.

He pointed to an absence of overlap between the companies.

Couche-Tard said on Wednesday that it had submitted an offer at €20 a share, financed largely in cash.

A takeover would combine Carrefour’s extensive European base with the Canadian company’s North American-focused network of convenienc­e stores and gas stations.

A representa­tive for Couche-Tard did not reply to a request for comment about the French finance minister’s remarks.

The boards of both companies haven’t yet met, so Carrefour considers that any posturing by the government is premature, according to a person familiar with the negotiatio­ns who declined to be identified by name.

Le Maire said a decree he introduced in 2019 on state screening of foreign investment­s could allow the government to block the deal.

Those rules enable the Finance Ministry to block a non-European investor from holding more than 25% of the voting rights in a listed company in certain sectors.

When the pandemic hit, the government cut the threshold for its investment screening to 10%, saying the crisis could make some companies vulnerable to foreign takeovers.

As well as covering sectors like aerospace and cybersecur­ity, the decree applies to the “production, transforma­tion and distributi­on” of agricultur­al produce when those activities contribute to “objectives of national food security.”

“If this deal continues, food sovereignt­y comes before everything,” Le Maire said. “People watching will ask themselves what the impact on jobs will be at France’s biggest private sector employer and whether food sovereignt­y will be guaranteed.”

Some analysts said Le Maire sounded clear and firm, leaving little room for negotiatio­n.

“The government has the last word

— game over,” Fabienne Caron, an analyst at Kepler Cheuvreux, wrote in a note to clients.

Carrefour, which operates everything from convenienc­e stores to giant suburban hypermarke­ts, has a workforce of about 105,000 in the country, making any deal especially sensitive for the government.

France has a history of objecting to foreign takeovers of its bluechip companies.

In 2005, French politician­s frowned on talk of an approach from PepsiCo Inc to Danone SA, leaving any such deal dead in the water.

More recently, deals such as the GEAlstom transactio­n were cleared with stringent conditions. That didn’t prevent GE from implementi­ng job cuts later on.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? A pedestrian walks past a Couche-Tard convenienc­e store in Montreal on Wednesday.
BLOOMBERG A pedestrian walks past a Couche-Tard convenienc­e store in Montreal on Wednesday.

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