Nestle may join the battle for Cadbury
Nestle is weighing options including a possible bid for Cadbury that would challenge Kraft Foods’ offer and a potential move by Hershey Co, according to two people with knowledge of the matter.
Nestle is reviewing its options with bankers and may decide against a bid, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the talks are private. Hershey and Ferrero said in statements last week that they were also evaluating options. Ferrero, the maker of Nutella, is unlikely to proceed with an offer, said three people briefed on the situation.
Kraft’s unsolicited $17-billion bid for Cadbury would create the largest maker of candy, threatening Nestle’s and Hershey’s market positions . Any bid by Nestle or Hershey may be countered with a higher offer from Kraft, which has never said its current cash-and-stock proposal is final. “We’re not surprised there are rival bidders considering an offer given the attractiveness of Cadbury’s portfolio,” Erin Swanson, an analyst at Morningstar in Chicago , said in a telephone interview on Saturday. “Nestle hasn’t seemed interested in Cadbury, but from a defensive perspective, they could consider it and anything could happen.”
Kraft’s bid values Cadbury at 726 pence a share, based on November 20 closing stock prices. The London-based maker of Creme Eggs and Trident gum, which closed at 801 pence, has traded above the bid price since the offer was made. Northfield, Illinois-based Kraft, the maker of Oreo cookies and processed cheese, rose 20 cents to $27.17 on November 20 on the New York Stock Exchange . Hershey, based in the Pennsylvania town of the same name, added 4 cents to $37.18. It has a market value of $8.47 billion, compared with Kraft’s $40.1 billion.
“We’re the only offer on the table, and we’re confident we’re the best, most logical partner for Cadbury,” Mike Mitchell, a Kraft spokesman, said on Saturday by e-mail .
Spokesmen for Hershey and Vevey, Switzerland-based Nestle declined to comment. A representative from Cadbury also declined to comment . Hershey’s controlling trust wants the company to make a $17-billion offer, the Wall Street Journal reported November 20.
“That’s enough money to get you in the game for sure,” Brian Krawez, a senior research analyst at Scharf Investments in Santa Cruz, California, said in an interview earlier this month. “I think they could blow Kraft out of the water.” Krawez, who holds Cadbury and Nestle shares, has no Kraft stock. Nestle, the world’s biggest confectionery company, may confront antitrust obstacles if it bought Cadbury . “Nestle would face a host of market competition authority difficulty with chocolate ,” said Thomas Russo, a partner at Lancaster , Pennsylvania-based Gardner Russo & Gardner, which holds Nestle, Cadbury and Kraft shares.
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