The Mercury News

Kraft Heinz still hungry for Unilever

Merger would dethrone Nestle as world’s biggest packaged food maker

- By Candice Choi and Michelle Chapman

NEW YORK — Kraft Heinz is attempting to buy Unilever in a $143 billion deal that would join the U.S. maker of cheeses and lunch meats with the European producer of mayo, teas and seasonings in a global powerhouse.

Unilever rejected the approach and called the price too low, while Kraft Heinz says it’s still interested in a deal. The shares of both companies surged to new highs as investors saw prospects for cost cutting.

A combinatio­n of Kraft Heinz, which sells Oscar Mayer meats, Jell-O pudding and Velveeta cheese, and Unilever, which owns brands including Hellmann’s, Lipton and Knorr, would rival Nestle as the world’s biggest packaged food maker by sales.

That might not lead to big changes that customers would notice on the supermarke­t shelves. But it’s people’s changing tastes, shifting away from boxed and canned groceries in favor of items that seem fresher or healthier, that are driving deal-making in the food industry.

Companies like Kraft Heinz, itself formed from two centuryold businesses in 2015, are trying to find new avenues for growth amid heightened competitio­n.

Part of the challenge is the proliferat­ion of smaller food makers marketing more wholesome products, which makes it harder for the establishe­d companies to drive up sales simply by selling more of their wellknown products or by raising prices, as they have in the past.

“That obviously has its limits,” said David Garfield, head of the consumer products unit at consulting firm AlixPartne­rs.

Instead, companies are being forced to dig deeper to find cost efficienci­es or tap into new

markets, Garfield said. That can include mergers that result in consolidat­ed manufactur­ing systems, or that give companies access to distributi­on networks in regions of the world where they don’t have a big presence.

Those were some of the factors that drove Oreo and Chips Ahoy maker Mondelez Internatio­nal — which was split from Kraft in 2012 —to make an unsuccessf­ul takeover bid for Hershey last year before retreating. And they were among the reasons cited by executives in the Kraft Heinz tie up, which was engineered by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway and 3G Capital, the Brazilian investment firm with a history of taking over companies and aggressive­ly cutting costs.

Bernardo Hees, a 3G partner, has slashed jobs and pursued other savings, some of them granular, as CEO of Kraft Heinz. In a 2015 memo to employees, Hees reminded them to print on both sides of the paper, reuse office supplies like binders and turn off computers before leaving the office to cut down on energy costs. The company also stopped stocking the corporate office with free Kraft snacks.

Unilever follows Nestle, PepsiCo and Mondelez as the world’s biggest packaged food maker by retail sales, coming in ahead of Kraft Heinz, according to Euromonito­r Internatio­nal. In addition to its food products, it sells health and beauty products such as Axe body spray and Dove soap.

In the meantime, food and drinks companies like Coca-Cola, General Mills and Kellogg are also under pressure from Wall Street to slash costs and find products that suit the shifting customer preference­s.

Shares of Kraft Heinz closed up nearly 11 percent Friday. Unilever jumped 14 percent.

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