Restaurant operator Yum China rejects $17.6 billion
Hillhouse-led offer: sources
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[August 29, 2018]
By Kane Wu
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Fast-food chain
operator Yum China Holdings Inc <YUMC.N> has rejected a $17.6 billion
buyout offer from a consortium led by Chinese investment firm Hillhouse
Capital Group, quashing what would have been one of Asia's biggest deals
this year, people with direct knowledge of the matter said.
The Hillhouse-led consortium, which included regional investment house
Baring Private Equity Asia, expressed an interest to offer $46 per
share, or nearly 24 percent above Tuesday's closing price, for the
biggest fast-food chain in China, the people said.
Global investment house KKR & Co <KKR.N> and Chinese sovereign wealth
fund China Investment Corp were also part of the consortium, one of the
people added.
The consortium is not expected to take any immediate action and could
just back off from pursuing the bid, that person said.
Hillhouse had been tapping lenders to finance the deal, Reuters reported
earlier this month, citing sources.
Yum China was spun off from Yum Brands! Inc <YUM.N> in 2016 and listed
on the New York Stock Exchange. It is the exclusive licensee of the KFC,
Pizza Hut and Taco Bell brands in China with over 8,100 restaurants in
more than 1,200 cities.
The offer did not include detailed terms or the structure of the
investor consortium, and the board decided it provided no extra value or
strategy for the business, said one of the people, who requested
anonymity as the information is confidential.
The $46 per share offer values Yum China at 13 times its earnings before
interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA), slightly
higher than McDonald's Corp multiple of <MCD.N> 12.6 but lower than
Domino's Pizza Inc's <DPZ.N> 20.8 times.
Yum China did not ask for a higher offer in its letter of rejection, two
of the people said.
Yum China said it would not comment on rumours or market speculation,
but a representative said the company had potential to grow to 20,000
stores over the long term. Baring declined to comment. Hillhouse, KKR
and CIC did not respond to requests for comment.
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Customers walk into a KFC store in downtown Shanghai July 31, 2014.
REUTERS/ Carlos Barria/File Photo
Chinese investment firm Primavera Capital and Ant Financial Services
Group bought a minority stake in Yum China for $460 million as part of
the spin-off deal in September 2016. Both are still shareholders in the
company.
Fred Hu, chairman of Primavera who is also the independent chairman of
the Yum China board, did not immediately respond to a request for
comment. Primavera got two Yum China board seats after the spin-off.
The Wall Street Journal first reported the rejection, citing an
unidentified person familiar with the matter.
Shares of Yum China rose as much as 12 percent on Tuesday before closing
3.86 percent higher.
In addition to KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell brands, Yum China also runs
Chinese fast-food chain First East Dawning and hotpot restaurant Little
Sheep, which it acquired in 2012.
Yum was the first major Western fast-food company to enter China,
opening a KFC store in central Beijing in 1987. Parent Yum Brands!
currently collects 3 percent of KFC, Taco Bell and Pizza Hut China sales
as royalties.
Former Yum China chairman and CEO Sam Su, who was pivotal in the
company's expansion in the world's second-largest economy, now serves as
an operating partner at Hillhouse, although one of the people said he
was not involved in the proposed buyout.
The company's second-quarter net income increased 13 percent
year-on-year but Pizza Hut continued to face challenges in China's
competitive casual dining space, its CEO said on Aug. 1.
(Reporting by Kane Wu; Additional reporting by Miyoung Kim; Editing by
Stephen Coates and Richard Borsuk)
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