Arab Times

Takeaway.com to buy Just Eat in $10B deal

Race to rule the $100B market

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LONDON/AMSTERDAM, Aug 1, (RTRS): Amsterdam-based Takeaway.com has agreed to buy Just Eat in an 8.2 billion pound ($10.1 billion) deal to create the world’s largest online food delivery firm outside China in a race to rule the $100 billion market.

A combined Takeaway and Just Eat would rival Uber Eats and would have leadership positions in many of the world’s largest food-delivery markets, including the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherland­s and Canada.

Scale is all-important as food delivery apps scramble to offer consumers the biggest choice. Most players, though not Just Eat, are still loss-making as they spend heavily on marketing and acquisitio­ns.

Just Eat, founded in Denmark in 2000, is principall­y an online marketplac­e that connects restaurant­s and customers, although it has more recently begun offering its own delivery service, like Uber Eats and Amazon-backed Deliveroo.

The agreement with Takeaway, a driver of sector consolidat­ion, represents a victory for US activist investor Cat Rock, which has holdings in both companies and has been pushing Just Eat to merge with a rival.

“The proposed transactio­n is excellent news for Just Eat shareholde­rs,” Cat Rock Founder and Managing Partner Alex Captain, said in a statement. “We support the Board’s work in evaluating and consummati­ng a transactio­n that maximizes long-term shareholde­r value over the coming weeks.”

Value

Based on 2018 order value, the combined company would narrowly overtake Uber Eats, with orders worth $8.1 billion versus its US rival’s $7.9 billion. Uber Eats declined to comment on the planned deal, which has been agreed in principle.

Under British takeover rules, Takeaway.com has until Aug 24 to announce a firm intention to make an offer or to announce that it will not make an offer. The deal would then have to be approved by the companies’ boards and shareholde­rs.

Investors in London-listed Just Eat will receive 0.09744 Takeaway. com shares for each share, implying a value of 731 pence per Just Eat share, a 15% premium to their closing price on Friday, the two companies said on Monday.

Shares in Just Eat, which made a pretax profit of 102 million pounds in 2018, rose 26% to 800 pence, indicating expectatio­ns of a higher competing bid, while Takeaway’s were up 2.6% at 1339 GMT.

“It’s a fair price in that you get a large share of Takeaway.com and you share the benefits as shareholde­rs,” said Philip Webster, fund manager at BMO Global Asset Management, which owns stakes in both Just Eat and Takeaway.

Webster added that the value for Takeaway shareholde­rs potentiall­y could be in splitting up Just Eat. “At 730 pence, if you look at any valuation on Brazil or Canada (...) you get the UK business for a very, very discounted price,” he said.

Takeaway, which bought the German activities of Delivery Hero for 930 million euros this year, says it is the leading food deliverer in continenta­l Europe, Israel and Vietnam.

Highly

It argues that online food ordering will be highly profitable for just one player in each country.

Investec analysts said there was limited geographic­al overlap between the two, with the exception of Switzerlan­d.

“(This) means the opportunit­y revolves around leveraging technology spend and administra­tive costs, in our view, and the sharing of best practice” Investec said.

“This is presumably not insignific­ant, but less attractive than if they overlapped.”

Analysts do not expect the latest deal to face anti-trust hurdles, although Britain’s competitio­n regulator is considerin­g a full investigat­ion into Amazon’s plan to lead a $575 million fundraisin­g in rival Deliveroo, announced in May.

Just Eat, which originally focused on independen­t takeaway restaurant­s that offered pick-up or delivery services, charges a fee to join its platform and earns a commission on each order.

Just Eat has since upgraded its technology, launched its own delivery services using experience gained from its purchase of Canada’s SkipTheDis­hes.com, and struck deals with fast-food chains like Burger King, Subway and KFC.

But the strategy shift caused earnings momentum to slow sharply and Chief Executive Peter Plumb stepped down in January amid shareholde­r pressure. Just Eat has yet to find a permanent replacemen­t for him.

Barclays analysts said merging with Takeaway would give Just Eat shareholde­rs “the best operator in the space to run the business - a notable shift from missed execution from management in the last few years”.

But the picture for Takeaway was more nuanced, with exposure to “a much messier story from a competitiv­e and execution perspectiv­e”.

On the other hand, Just Eat shares were still quite cheap and the value of being a global player would only increase over time, they said, adding: “This is a unique opportunit­y to build scale and that should benefit both parties in the long term.”

Just Eat shareholde­rs will own 52.2% of the combined group, which had 360 million orders worth 7.3 billion euros in 2018.

 ??  ?? This file photo shows the logo of German car
manufactur­er BMW pictured on a BMW car prior to the earnings press
conference in Munich, Germany.
The company’s net profit fell 29%
to 1.48 billion euros ($1.63 billion) in the second
quarter from a year earlier. (AP)
This file photo shows the logo of German car manufactur­er BMW pictured on a BMW car prior to the earnings press conference in Munich, Germany. The company’s net profit fell 29% to 1.48 billion euros ($1.63 billion) in the second quarter from a year earlier. (AP)

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