Sunday Times

Cold shoulder from Unilever fails to cloud Kraft-Heinz’s glad eye

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UNILEVER rejected a surprise $143billion takeover bid from US food company Kraft Heinz on Friday, saying it saw no reason to discuss a deal which it believed had no financial or strategic merit.

But while Unilever, maker of Lipton tea and Dove soap, said the $50 per share offer undervalue­d it and recommende­d its shareholde­rs take no action, Kraft Heinz said it looked forward to “working to reach agreement on the terms of a transactio­n”.

Analysts saw this as a sign that Kraft was open to a higher bid, although the Anglo-Dutch company said in a statement it saw no basis for further talks.

Unilever shares jumped as much as 14% to a record high. They were up 13% at £37.79 in lunch-time trade on Friday, short of the offer price.

A combinatio­n of the two multinatio­nals would be the third-biggest takeover in history and the biggest acquisitio­n yet of a UK-based firm, according to Thomson Reuters data.

The Kraft Heinz approach comes as the global packaged-food industry grapples with slowing growth, new competitio­n from upstart brands, deflation in developed markets and more health-conscious consumers.

Unilever has a larger presence than some peers in emerging markets, which were once the big driver of industry growth, but which have slowed in recent years.

It is also feeling the after-effects of Britain’s decision to leave the European Union.

Although Kraft is smaller than Unilever, with a market value of $106billion on Thursday, it is 50.9% owned by billionair­e Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway and 3G Capital, the private equity firm that also controls beer company Anheuser-Busch InBev.

It has been widely expected to do a deal this year, given earlier reports that 3G had raised a new fund.

3G has orchestrat­ed a string of big deals rocking the food and drink industry, including Anheuser-Busch InBev’s takeover of SABMiller and the combinatio­n of Kraft and Heinz.

Unilever said Kraft’s proposal represente­d an 18% premium to its share price on Thursday, the day before news of the bid was announced in a stock market statement.

It said Kraft’s proposal included $30.23 per share in cash, payable in US dollars, and 0.222 of a share in a new enlarged entity per Unilever share.

“This is cheap money meeting industrial logic,” said Steve Clayton, manager of the HL Select UK Shares fund at Hargreaves Lansdown, which owns Unilever shares.

A deal would offer opportunit­ies to combine marketing, manufactur­ing and distributi­on in addition to cutting costs.

“Kraft Heinz are attempting a massive push on the fast forward button . . . to acquire the sheer scale of brands that Unilever represents through one-off acquisitio­ns could take decades,” Clayton said. —

To acquire the brands Unilever represents in oneoff acquisitio­ns could take decades

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