Conagra to buy Pinnacle Foods for $8.1 billion,
expanding frozen food line
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[June 27, 2018]
(Reuters) - Conagra Brands Inc
<CAG.N> said on Wednesday it would buy Pinnacle Foods Inc <PF.N> for
about $8.1 billion in cash and stock, creating a frozen food powerhouse
with brands such as Birds Eye, Healthy Choice and Marie Callender's.
The deal between the two packaged food companies is occurring amid
drastic changing consumer tastes as shoppers opt for healthier products
instead of processed items.
Profit margins in the industry have also been squeezed by higher
commodities and transportation costs.
Conagra has been bulking up its frozen food line, which rakes in sales
of $2.7 billion, with recent acquisitions like breakfast food maker
Sandwich Bros. It has also revamped brands such as Banquet's frozen
meals by offering protein-rich products with fewer artificial
ingredients.
As part of the deal, Pinnacle Foods shareholders will get $43.11 per
share in cash and 0.6494 shares of Conagra's stock for each share of
Pinnacle Foods held, implying an offer price of about $68.
Including debt, the deal is valued at $10.9 billion.
Conagra's stock was down 7 percent and Pinnacle shares were down 4.4
percent in premarket trading.
The acquisition is a victory of sorts for Conagra Chief Executive
Officer Sean Connolly, who had earlier unsuccessfully tried to buy
Pinnacle Foods as CEO of Hillshire. The sale to Hillshire was canceled
after the company agreed to sell itself to Tyson Foods Inc <TSN.N> for
$7.7 billion.
Talks, however, restarted in April after activist hedge fund Jana
Partners LLC bought a 9.1 percent stake in the New Jersey-based Pinnacle
and urged the company to look for a sale.
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The Conagra Brands logo. Conagra/via REUTERS
To complete the deal if necessary to obtain antitrust approval, Pinnacle said
Conagra would divest assets of either of the two companies that account for up
to $300 million of net sales. (https://bit.ly/2N3SNNc)
Analysts at JPMorgan do not see any regulatory hurdles for the deal despite
there being overlaps in 44 categories.
"Our best guess: Perhaps a couple of brands will need to be divested, but the
deal – if the two parties agree to combine – likely would pass regulatory
muster," JP Morgan analyst Ken Goldman wrote in a note.
Last week, sources told Reuters that Pinnacle Foods had restarted talks about
potentially selling itself to its larger peer.
The deal is expected to close by the end of calendar 2018.
Goldman Sachs and Centerview Partners are financial advisers to Conagra, while
Evercore and Credit Suisse are advising Pinnacle.
(Reporting by Aishwarya Venugopal in Bengaluru; Editing by Shailesh Kuber,
Bernard Orr)
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