Coke moves away from AB InBev with Africa
bottling deal
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[December 21, 2016]
By Philip Blenkinsop and Martinne Geller
BRUSSELS/LONDON (Reuters) - Coca-Cola Co
<KO.N> has reached a deal to buy Anheuser-Busch InBev's <ABI.BR>
majority stake in their African bottling venture for $3.15 billion and
hold onto it until it finds a new owner, the companies said on
Wednesday.
Coke said in October it would exercise a right to buy the stake formerly
owned by SABMiller following SAB's takeover by AB InBev.
Coke has not said why it decided to buy back the stake, but it might be
in its best interest to avoid partnering with AB InBev, which has no
experience in Africa, and keep the beer giant at arm's length.
With little room left for AB InBev to grow meaningfully in beer, chatter
among bankers has turned to whether the deal-hungry mega brewer will
eventually move into soft drinks. That could put Coke at the top of its
list, though Coke's $180 billion market value would be a huge hurdle.
AB InBev is already a large PepsiCo <PEP.N> bottler in Latin America,
but up until now has had no business in Africa, where distribution can
be particularly challenging due to poor infrastructure.
Coke and AB InBev, the world's largest makers of soft drinks and beer,
respectively, said in a joint statement that they had agreed the
transfer of AB InBev's 54.5 percent stake in Coca-Cola Beverages Africa
(CCBA), the continent's largest soft drink bottler, with operations in a
dozen markets including South Africa, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania.
They also announced another deal for Coke to take other African
territories not covered by CCBA, such as Zambia, Zimbabwe and Botswana,
as well as bottling operations in El Salvador and Honduras. The price
for those markets was not disclosed.
Coke said it planned to hold all operations temporarily until they can
be refranchised to other partners. That is in keeping with its global
business model, which sees it handling marketing and innovation, and
selling beverage concentrate to a network of regional and local bottlers
who bottle and distribute the drinks.
These bottlers include Coca-Cola European Partners <CCE.N>, Coca-Cola
Hellenic <CCH.L> and Coca-Cola Icecek <CCOLA.IS>, all of whom have been
pegged by analysts as possible buyers.
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Bottles of Coca-Cola are seen in a Casino supermarket in Mouans
Sartoux, France, October 27, 2016. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard
"We are continuing negotiations with a number of parties who are
highly qualified and interested," said Coke Chief Executive Muhtar
Kent in a statement. "We look forward to refranchising these
territories as soon as practical following regulatory approval."
Coke Icecek, which operates in Turkey, Pakistan and other central
Asian countries, said in November that it was working with an
investment bank to explore its options.
Africa is an attractive market for packaged food and drink makers,
due to the increasing appetite and discretionary budget of its
growing middle class.
Coke, which formed CCBA with SABMiller and the South African owners
of bottler Coca-Cola Sabco in 2014, had retained the right to buy
SABMiller's stake in the event of a change of control at the brewer.
AB InBev has now raised some $27 billion from divestments of parts
of SABMiller's business, recouping more than a quarter of the 79
billion pounds ($97.7 billion) it paid for the world's second
largest brewer.
The transactions, subject to relevant regulatory and minority
approvals, are expected to close by the end of 2017.
Coke was advised on this deal by Rothschild, while AB InBev was
advised by Lazard and Deutsche Bank.
(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop; editing by Alexandra Hudson)
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