The Palm Beach Post

Nestle to pay $7.15 billion to sell Starbucks coffee

- By Corinne Gretler

Nestle and Starbucks are joining forces to rejuvenate their coffee empires.

The Swiss maker of Nescafe will pay the Seattle-based chain $7.15 billion upfront in cash for the rights to sell Starbucks coffee products in supermarke­ts, restaurant­s and catering operations, the companies said Monday. Nestle will use the Starbucks brand in its Nespresso and Dolce Gusto capsule systems next year.

The alliance underlines Nestle’s efforts to capture more upscale java drinkers in the U.S., where the maker of Nespresso and Nescafe has been outpaced by JAB Holding Co. The investment company of Europe’s billionair­e Reimann family has spent more than $30 billion building a coffee empire by acquiring assets such as Keurig Green Mountain and Peet’s.

“The deal with Starbucks allows Nestle to keep JAB at a distance,” Jean-Philippe Bertschy, an analyst at Bank Vontobel, wrote in a note. He added that the price may seem expensive, but the investment may pay off within three to four years. “It allows Nestle to gain scale in the U.S., a weak spot so far.”

Nestle shares rose as much as 0.8 percent in early Zurich trading. The stock has dropped about 9 percent this year.

The deal is Nestle’s first tie-up with a major rival in coffee. Nestle expects the deal to contribute positively to its earnings per share and organic growth targets from 2019. The business has annual sales of $2 billion, about 9 percent of Starbucks’ total revenue. The coffee chain said it will use the proceeds to accelerate share buybacks, now expecting to return about $20 billion through repurchase­s and dividends through fiscal 2020.

Starbucks will continue to produce the coffee products in North America, while Nestle will be in charge of manufactur­ing in the rest of the world. Sales will be booked by Nestle, which will pay royalties to Starbucks.

About 500 Starbucks employees will join Nestle, and operations will continue to be located in Seattle. The agreement is expected to close by the end of 2018.

Starbucks said Nestle will also obtain the rights to sell packaged coffee products under brands including Seattle’s Best Coffee, Starbucks VIA and Torrefazio­ne Italia. The deal also the includes Teavana tea brand, though it excludes ready-to-drink products and all sales within Starbucks coffee shops.

“With Starbucks, Nescafe and Nespresso, we bring together three iconic brands in the world of coffee,” Nestle Chief Executive Officer Mark Schneider said in the statement. The deal is Nestle’s largest since he began leading the company last year.

Schneider has reversed Nestle’s policy on roast-and-ground coffee, a category that the Swiss company began shunning decades ago as it considered it a commodity business with little value to add. Last year’s $425 million purchase of a stake in Blue Bottle Coffee was a step back into the segment, whose growth prospects have revived as consumers become more sophistica­ted about coffee.

While Starbucks holds the crown in the $13.8 billion U.S. coffee market, Nescafe and Nespresso hold the top ranks globally, according to Euromonito­r. Starbucks has been examining each of its businesses to streamline its operations and focus on those that add most to sales and profit, Chief Financial Officer Scott Maw said.

 ?? STEFAN WERMUTH / BLOOMBERG ?? Nestle’s recently announced alliance with Starbucks underlines the efforts of the Swiss maker of Nescafe to capture more upscale java drinkers in the U.S.
STEFAN WERMUTH / BLOOMBERG Nestle’s recently announced alliance with Starbucks underlines the efforts of the Swiss maker of Nescafe to capture more upscale java drinkers in the U.S.

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