HomeBussinessCircle K owner launches massive takeover proposal for 7-Eleven

Circle K owner launches massive takeover proposal for 7-Eleven

Date:

Related stories

O’Toole could play Dublin Racing Festival role

O’Toole has been given a clean bill of health...

Residents in areas of north county Dublin left without water

Residents in Donabate and surrounding areas of north county...

New number 19 Dublin Bus route to be extended after local protests

There was widespread anger in Drumcondra after plans to...
spot_imgspot_img

Canada’s Alimentation Couche-Tard is one of the biggest forecourt operators in Ireland since acquiring the former Topaz chain from businessman Denis O’Brien in 2015 in a deal thought to have valued the Irish business in the region of €450m, including paying €258m in cash.

A merger with the owner of 7-Eleven would create the world’s top operator of roughly 100,000 convenience stores.

Valued at the equivalent of $31bn before news of the offer emerged, Seven & i shares jumped 23pc yesterday. The company said the bid was preliminary and non-binding, without disclosing terms.

A special committee of independent outside directors will make a “prompt, careful and comprehensive review of the proposal”, Seven & i said.

Couche-Tard confirmed it made a “friendly, non-binding proposal” but gave no details, and said it is not certain an agreement will be reached.

Although Couche-Tard is smaller than Seven & i, with about 14,000 stores compared with more than 85,000 for the Japanese retailer, the Canadian company enjoys a bigger valuation of about $58.5bn.

Foreign takeovers of Japanese companies are extremely rare, but recent changes in guidelines for merger and acquisition proposals, and activist investors pushing companies to boost value – including at Seven & i – could boost the odds of a deal that would create a global convenience-store behemoth.

“It all depends on the price, and I guess the weak yen has made it more attractive and anything north of ¥7 trillion, the management would have a tough time rejecting,” said Amir Anvarzadeh, a strategist at Asymmetric Advisors.

Shares of Seven & i posted their largest gain on record following a report on the bid. Neither offered details on the value of Couche-Tard’s offer.

Before yesterday’s jump, the stock had dropped 21pc since the end of February, making the company more attractive to a possible suitor.

Seven & i has come under pressure from activist fund ValueAct Capital Management LP over perceptions that its assets could be worth more and to narrow its focus to 7-Eleven stores, saying that as a standalone listed company the convenience-store business could be worth as much as ¥8,500 per share. Seven & i shares closed at ¥2,161 yesterday.

In reaction, it has taken restructuring measures and initiated a buyback after fending off efforts to oust CEO Ryuichi Isaka. Although headquartered in Tokyo, Seven & i gets the majority of its revenue from North America compared with 25pc from Japan.

Couche-Tard, Canada’s most valuable retailer, operates convenience stores around the world under its own brand, as well as Circle K and Ingo. It has a history of expansion overseas, and bought almost 2,200 stations in Europe from TotalEnergies SE for €3.1bn last year. It previously made a $20bn bid to buy Carrefour, which was blocked by the French government.

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

spot_img