Coca-Cola pays $2.4 bn to acquire Chinese juice maker
Coca-Cola will pay $2.5 billion for Chinese juice maker Huiyuan, triple its value, strengthening the world’s leading drinks maker’s hold on a booming market in the biggest foreign takeover in China.
���Coca-Cola is looking to tap the pure juice market where Huiyuan is the market leader,��� said Emma Liu, an analyst with Nomura Securities. ���Though it���s a relatively small market in the beverages space, it���s a high-growth market because of the growing personal income in China and increased health awareness.��� The Chinese juice market ��� encompassing pure juice, diluted juices and nectars ��� is expected by analysts to grow at above 10% in coming years alongside rising incomes, benefiting Huiyuan, Tingyi, Uni-president and others.
Huiyuan controls about 43% of the pure-juice market, according to AC Nielsen figures cited by the company.
���They are in the same industry and it would take a lot of effort to build a brand name, especially in China, (which is) such a huge market,��� said Andrew To, sales director at Tai Fook Securities . ���The premium is being paid for Huiyuan���s brand name and sales network.���Huiyuan expects its revenue to grow five-fold in 3-5 years to 10 billion yuan ($1.46 billion) from 2 billion yuan in 2006. Shares in smaller competitors rallied on Wednesday���s news, with Andre Juice jumping 17% and Haisheng Juice up 4% versus the broader market���s .HSI 1.3 % fall. Coca-Cola will buy all outstanding shares, bonds and options of Huiyuan and take the company private after the acquisition. ���Huiyuan is a long-established and successful juice brand in China and is highly complementary to the Coca-Cola China business,��� said Muhtar Kent, Chief Executive of Coca-Cola.
Huiyuan is about 23% owned by French food giant Groupe Danone and 6.8% owned by US private equity firm Warburg Pincus.Coca-Cola���s purchase marks the largest-ever takeover in China, where inbound M&A deals are notoriously difficult given state dominance of the corporate sector and regulatory red tape.The only larger acquisitions by foreign companies in China have been for minority stakes in the country���s banks. Chinese inbound corporate deals are up 30% from the same period a year ago, to $15.3 billion. Coca-Cola was advised on the deal by Royal Bank of Scotland and Huiyuan was advised by Goldman Sachs.
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