Manila Bulletin

Emperador gets rival bid for French cognac firm

- ANDREW TAN

HONG KONG/BANGKOK (Reuters) – Thai billionair­e Charoen Sirivadhan­abhakdi is considerin­g buying cognac maker Louis Royer, people familiar with the matter said, potentiall­y locking horns with a Philippine tycoon for the French firm amid a forecast rebound in Asian demand for luxury spirits.

Liquor firm Emperador Inc., controlled by the Philippine­s’ fourth-richest person, Andrew Tan, said last week it has submitted a bid to buy Louis Royer, which has been put on the block by Japan’s Suntory Holdings Ltd. and is valued at about $150 million by sources. Charoen controls Thai Beverage PCL.

The emerging battle for Louis Royer underscore­s the tycoons’ desire to add top-end spirit brands to their portfolios, both to help sell their other brands and to benefit from a revival in demand for cognac in Asia, which is driven by countries such as Malaysia and Vietnam where wealth is accumulati­ng rapidly.

“It’s not really about the fundamenta­l value of the business,” said one senior Hong Kong-based M&A banker involved in the deal. “It’s about having a high profile brand inside your portfolio that helps you sell other products.”

It was not immediatel­y clear if there were other bidders for Louis Royer or when a final decision on the sale will be reached. Suntory declined to comment.

“We don’t have a (cognac) business. We are open for every opportunit­y for beverage business,” said Vichate Tantiwanic­h, senior vice president for corporate affairs at Thai Bev, when asked if his group will make a bid for Louis Royer. “But for this brand (Louis Royer), we can’t confirm that we will buy.”

Louis Royer, which has about 7 billion yen ($57.1 million) of annual sales, was bought by Suntory in 1989 as the Japanese company was expanding overseas. But over the years, Suntory has taken on too much debt to build its global empire, including the $15.7billion purchase of spirits maker Beam Inc., and is looking to exit some of its brands.

Asian demand for cognac, a variety of distilled brandy named after the town of Cognac in France, has dropped over the past few years due to a crackdown on conspicuou­s consumptio­n in China. But it is set to recover and reach 30.4 million liter in 2019, a rise of 13 percent from 2015 that will outpace world demand growth, market research firm Euromonito­r forecasts.

Malaysia and Vietnam are the other big cognac consumers in the region, ranking number three and four, behind China and Taiwan. Vietnam’s demand is set to surge 75 percent between 20142019, Euromonito­r estimates.

Louis Royer, with its XO cognac that was launched in 1988 in a decanter, is the smallest of the global cognac makers. The industry is dominated by the likes of LVMH and its Hennessy brand, and Remy Cointreau, maker of Remy Martin cognac, among others.

Charoen was Thailand’s thirdwealt­hiest in 2014, when he had a net worth of $11.3 billion, according to Forbes. Tan has a net worth of about $4.6 billion, the publicatio­n estimates.

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