Business Day

Weetabix back in the cereal pack

• Post acquires UK favourite from China’s Bright Food

- Martinne Geller, Adam Jourdan and Lauren Hirsch London/Shanghai/New York /Reuters

US company Post Holdings is buying Weetabix from China’s Bright Food Group for £1.4bn, putting the British breakfast favourite back into the hands of a cereal company.

US company Post Holdings is buying Weetabix from China’s Bright Food Group for £1.4bn, putting the British breakfast favourite back into the hands of a cereal company.

Post said on Tuesday the combinatio­n would help its own brands, which include Honey Bunches of Oats and GrapeNuts, to expand overseas, while allowing for greater distributi­on of Weetabix and its Barbara’s brand in North America.

The sale comes just five years after Chinese state-owned Bright Food took control of Weetabix in a deal that valued it at £1.2bn at the time of a major overseas push stretching from Australia to Israel.

The brand has struggled to grow significan­tly since as cold cereals in western markets face more competitio­n from breakfast bars, Greek yogurts and fast-food chains.

Concerns over the sugar content of some cereals has also hit sales of such products.

The Weetabix brand had global retail sales of $310m in 2016, according to Euromonito­r Internatio­nal, up only 1.4% from 2012, the year in which Bright Food took control.

In China, which had been key to Bright Food’s purchase, retail sales of cold cereal have nearly doubled over the past five years, but it remains a relatively small category, worth just $933m, according to Euromonito­r, as most locals prefer hot breakfasts.

“It’s probably going to be a much better fit with Post,” said Liberum analyst Robert Waldschmid­t, noting that there would be cost savings and that the brand should benefit from being owned by a company with particular expertise in cereal.

INTERNATIO­NALISATION

For Bright Food, which makes dairy products, candy and other foodstuffs, the sale did not signal the end of its internatio­nal ambitions, said Bright spokesman Pan Jianjun, who is based in Shanghai.

“This is a part of our internatio­nalisation strategy.

“Selling assets enables us to expand better. Going forward Bright will stick to our overseas push,” he said.

The sale of Weetabix would give Bright extra firepower should it want to bid for any other food assets on the block. The global packaged food industry is in the midst of a wave of dealmaking, with giants Unilever and Reckitt Benckiser both selling multibilli­on-dollar food assets.

SELLING ASSETS ENABLES US TO EXPAND BETTER. GOING FORWARD BRIGHT WILL STICK TO OVERSEAS PUSH

Weetabix, which also makes Alpen muesli, is Britain’s second-largest ready-to-eat cereal maker overall and the 85-yearold Weetabix brand is the nation’s top-selling cereal. Globally, it ranks seventh.

Bright Food took control of Weetabix from private equity firm Lion Capital, which had held its stake for over a decade.

Baring Private Equity Asia subsequent­ly bought Lion’s remaining stake in 2015.

The latest sale price, £1.4bn, is about 11.6 times the £120m of adjusted annual ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on) that Post said Weetabix would contribute before cost savings. It estimates those savings to reach £20m per year by the third full fiscal year after the deal is completed.

Post, headquarte­red in StLouis, the US, said the deal would immediatel­y add to its adjusted operating profit margins and its free cash flow, excluding one-time transactio­n expenses. The company expects to fund the deal with cash on hand and borrowings under its existing credit facility.

Post Holdings has moreover agreed in principle to establish a joint venture with Bright Food and Baring to manage the Weetabix China operations.

Post also affirmed its 2017 outlook and reported financial results for the second quarter ended March 31.

It posted net sales of $1.25bn, a net loss of $4m and adjusted ebitda of $228m.

It said it still expected 2017 adjusted ebitda of $920m$950m, excluding any contributi­on from Weetabix.

 ?? /Reuters ?? US bound: Packets of Weetabix cereal are seen in the Ocado Customer Fulfilment Centre in Hatfield on the outskirts of London. The brand has struggled to grow significan­tly.
/Reuters US bound: Packets of Weetabix cereal are seen in the Ocado Customer Fulfilment Centre in Hatfield on the outskirts of London. The brand has struggled to grow significan­tly.

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