The Scotsman

Whitbread’s £2.5bn handout

- By HENRY SAKER-CLARK

Premierinn­ownerwhitb­read said it has completed a programme to return £2.5 billion to shareholde­rs after it sold its Costa Coffee chain to Cocacola last year.

Whitbread said £2bn is being returned to shareholde­rs via a purchase of its own shares at a price of 4,972p per share in the latest phase of the capital return programme.

The shareholde­r payout comes after the hospitalit­y group completed the £3.9bn sale of high-street coffee brand Costa to Coca-cola in 2018.

The latest £2bn phase of the capital return programme from May to July comes after its initial wave saw £482 million worth of shares repurchase­d.

Whitbread said the tender offer would become unconditio­nal this morning.

The group said the offer was oversubscr­ibed, and the aggregate value of shares exceeded £2bn.

Whitbread’s shares have been in a rich vein of form over the past 18 months, rising by around 30 per cent over the period after it was buoyed by the sale of its high-street coffee shop business.

Proceeds of the deal have been given back to shareholde­rs, as well as being used to pay down debt and boost its pension fund.

Whitbread acquired Costa in 1995 for £19m from founders Sergio and Bruno Costa when it had only 39 shops. It grew to have more than 2,400 outlets and embark on overseas expansion before it was snapped up by the US drinks giant.

Last month, the Premier Inn owner reported a sharp drop in UK sales as Brexit uncertaint­y continues to take its toll on business travel.

The group said like-for-like UK accommodat­ion sales dropped 4.6 per cent in its first quarter of the financial year, while revenue per room – a key measure for hotel firms – tumbled 6.3 per cent.

Shares in Whitbread ended the day 4.4 per cent lower at 4,685p.

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