The Mercury News

Caffeine hit for Coca-Cola company as it buys Costa coffee shop chain

- By Pan Pylas

LONDON — Coca-Cola is hoping to give itself another caffeine-fueled boost.

The company said Friday it will buy the Costa coffee brand from British firm Whitbread for $5.1 billion in cash. Costa is Britain’s biggest coffee company with over 2,400 coffee shops in the U.K. and another 1,400 in more than 30 countries. It has 460 in China, its second-biggest market.

The deal, expected to complete in the first half of 2019, plugs a big hole in Coca-Cola’s portfolio. CocaCola owns the Georgia and Gold Peak coffee brands, but the purchase of Costa will give it a much broader presence.

“Hot beverages is one of the few remaining segments of the total beverage landscape where Coca-Cola does not have a global brand,” said James Quincey, Coca-Cola President & CEO.

Coca-Cola, which has over 500 brands in its stable including Fanta, innocent smoothies and Powerade

sports drinks, certainly has the deep pockets to help push Costa on the world stage. In 2017, it generated operating income of $9.7 billion on revenues of $35.4 billion.

The deal represents a big return to Whitbread, which bought Costa in 1995 for 19 million pounds. Since then, Costa has grown from just 39 shops and in the year to March, Costa made an operating profit of 123 million pounds on sales of 1.29 billion.

In recent years, Whitbread has invested heavily

in Costa’s expansion overseas, but had been looking to siphon off the business to generate funds for the expansion and for its other business, the budget hotel chain Premier Inn.

Then Coca-Cola got in touch with what Whitbread said was a “highly compelling” offer. The Whitbread board unanimousl­y backed the deal.

“This transactio­n is great news for shareholde­rs as it recognizes the strategic value we have developed in the Costa brand and its internatio­nal growth potential and accelerate­s the realizatio­n of value for shareholde­rs in cash,” said Alison Brittain, Whitbread’s chief executive.

Whitbread will use a “significan­t majority” of the net cash proceeds — around 3.8 billion pounds after taking into account such things as transactio­n costs — returning cash to shareholde­rs. Some will be used to pay down debt and to make a contributi­on to the pension fund.

Doing so, Whitbread said, would “provide headroom” to further expand the Premier Inn budget hotel chain in Britain and Germany.

Shareholde­rs in Whitbread were impressed by the deal and the company’s share price soared 16 percent in morning trading in London.

“An excellent deal it may be, but Whitbread investors may miss the caffeine highs Costa serves up,” said Nicholas Hyett, equity analyst at London-based stockbroke­rs Hargreaves Lansdown.

Hyett said Costa will get “lots of care and attention” from Coca-Cola.

 ?? RUI VIEIRA — ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Costa is Britain’s biggest coffee company with more than 3,800 coffee shops worldwide.
RUI VIEIRA — ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Costa is Britain’s biggest coffee company with more than 3,800 coffee shops worldwide.

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