Whole Foods drew interest from other potential suitors
Two grocery companies and four private-equity firms expressed interest in possibly merging with Whole Foods Market or having some other business tie-up before the high-end grocery chain agreed to be bought by Amazon.com for $13.7 billion, a regulatory filing showed Friday.
None of the potential suitors was identified in the filing, which was the proxy statement for Whole Foods’ stockholders to vote on the deal.
One of the grocery companies, identified in the filing only as an “industry participant” called “Company X,” was privately held Albertsons, which owns numerous grocery chains, according to the Reuters news agency, citing one unidentified source.
Amazon also told Whole Foods that the ecommerce giant would not engage in a bidding war with other suitors and that the $42 a share it has agreed to pay in the merger was Amazon’s “best and final offer,” the filing said.
The U.S. grocery industry was jolted June 16 when Amazon announced the deal for Whole Foods, a 465-store chain that focuses on natural and organic foods and has nearly $16 billion in annual sales.
Amazon is expected to bring to the grocery industry the same technological and logistics innovation and downward pressure on prices that it’s achieved in selling books, electronics and other merchandise.
The $42 price amounted to a 27 percent premium above where Whole Foods’ stock had closed the prior day.
The merger plans took shape because Whole Foods, based in Austin, has been struggling in recent years as Albertsons and other supermarket chains beefed up their offerings of natural and organic groceries.
In April, activist investor Jana Partners bought an 8.8 percent stake in Whole Foods and pressed its management for a possible sale.
That sparked the overtures from Company X and another “industry participant” that the filing called “Company Y,” along with the private-equity firms, the filing said.
Company X proposed a “merger-of-equals” that was “potentially valued at $35 to $40 a share,” but the other potential suitors did not make any specific proposals, the filing said.
Whole Foods, in turn, did “not solicit proposals from the private-equity firms” in part because it worried about sale talks being leaked to the public.
After Whole Foods reached out to Amazon on April 21, Amazon a month later initially offered $41 a share. On May 30, Whole Foods countered by asking for $45 a share, the filing said. Amazon responded by telling Whole Foods it “would disengage from its efforts to acquire” Whole Foods “if the $42 per share price were not accepted.”