Exclusive: China Resources Beer in talks to acquire
Heineken's China business - sources
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[March 08, 2018]
By Julie Zhu and Kane Wu
HONG KONG (Reuters) - China Resources Beer
(Holdings) Co Ltd is in talks to acquire Heineken NV’s China business in
a deal that could be worth more than $1 billion, as the country's
largest brewer seeks new growth from premium brands, five people close
to the discussions said.
The negotiations come as global beer giants such as Heineken, AB InBev (ABI.BR)
and Carlsberg (CARLb.CO) are facing fierce competition from local rivals
and each other in emerging markets, which have been touted as the growth
engine for the world's biggest brewers.
(For a graphic on 'Global beer market interactive' click http://tmsnrt.rs/2xMlHgE)
China is the world's largest beer market by volume. CR Beer's biggest
brand, Snow, is the world's top-selling beer, but is almost exclusively
sold in China.
One of the sources said the deal between CR Beer and Heineken would most
likely include three breweries - in Guangdong, Hainan and Zhejiang
provinces - Heineken's distribution operation and its brands in China.
The two brewers have discussed a share-swap as part of the transaction,
the source said.
Details have not been finalised and talks could yet fall apart, the
sources said. They declined to be identified as the information is not
public.
CR Beer did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Heineken
declined to comment.
Heineken, which entered China in 1983, has struggled to set up a strong
distribution network and to make a mark with its flagship Heineken
lager, which lags far behind AB InBev's Budweiser in the premium market,
industry analysts say.
The Dutch brewer had a 0.5 percent share of the China market by volume
in 2016, according to research firm Euromonitor International, while CR
Beer accounted for more than a quarter.
Heineken sells its premium lagers Heineken, Tiger and Sol in China,
along with cheaper local brands Anchor and Hainan Beer.
The company has invested millions of dollars in promoting Heineken as
the global lager of choice, predominantly through sports, including
soccer and Formula One. Next month will mark its second time as prime
sponsor of the Chinese Grand Prix.
Beer sales volume in China has been declining since 2013 and is forecast
to continue to fall, according to Euromonitor. Sales of higher-margin
premium beers, however, have been growing at a double-digit rate each
year during the same period.
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A Heineken sign is seen
at the main access to the new Heineken brewery in Meoqui, in
Chihuahua state, Mexico February 27, 2018. REUTERS/Jose Luis
Gonzalez
"CR Beer doesn’t have super-premium lagers, while Heineken has high-end brands
but lacks scale in China," said one source. "Heineken is a natural target for CR
Beer."
Heineken's eponymous brand sells for three times the price of Snow in China.
Chinese beer drinkers are overwhelmingly consumers of low-margin inexpensive
beer, which makes up 80 percent of the market by volume, compared with an
average of 18 percent in big developed markets, according to Nomura analysts.
Last year Japan's Asahi Group Holdings sold its 19.9 percent stake in Tsingtao
Brewery Co - CR Beer's biggest domestic rival - for $937 million as it decided
to focus on Europe and elsewhere in Asia.
CR Beer's interest in Heineken's China unit follows its takeover in 2016 of
SABMiller's 49 percent stake in its CR Snow venture for $1.6 billion.
That acquisition helped the Chinese brewer turn around its business. In 2016 it
reported its first annual profit in three years after a renewed focus on the
Snow brand and expanded sales in key Chinese cities.
Shares of CR Beer were trading at HK$30.85 on Thursday in Hong Kong giving the
group a market capitalization of about HK$100 billion ($12.76 billion). Heineken
shares were at 85.78 euros ($106.36) in early trade, valuing the group at 49.4
billion euros.
Heineken trades on an enterprise value - market capitalization plus debt - of 12
times its earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization in the
last year. That is above Carlsberg's multiple of 10 but far short of CR Beer's
23.
($1 = 7.8336 Hong Kong dollars)
($1 = 0.8065 euros)
(Reporting by Julie Zhu and Kane Wu in HONG KONG; additional reporting by Phil
Blenkinsop in BRUSSELS, Martinne Geller in London and Adam Jourdan in Shanghai;
Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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