Failed French supermarket deal unlikely to dampen ambitions of Canada's
Bouchard
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[January 16, 2021] By
Allison Lampert and Kevin Dougherty
MONTREAL/QUEBEC CITY (Reuters) - Political
opposition that killed Canadian convenience store operator Alimentation
Couche-Tard's $20 billion bid for French retailer Carrefour on Friday is
unlikely to end the global ambitions of founder Alain Bouchard.
The low-profile Canadian businessman built Couche-Tard from a single
store in Quebec in 1980 to a global network of convenience stores and
gas stations with a market value of $33 billion, with 66 acquisitions
along the way.
French politicians gave a strong 'non' to the proposed take-over,
calling it a matter of national food safety. Behind the scenes, Bouchard
made a misstep by not giving an early heads up to French Finance
Minister Bruno Le Maire, who was extremely upset to learn about the deal
from the media, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Bouchard, 72, who served as Couche-Tard's chief executive for 25 years
until 2014, started in business after learning hard lessons as a child
when his father, a subcontractor, went bankrupt.
"Couche-Tard is a master at converting dollars spent on gas on dollars
spent on food and convenience store products," Sylvain Charlebois,
director of the Agri-Food Analytics Lab at Dalhousie University in Nova
Scotia.
"You fill up your car with gas and then you go get a sandwich, newspaper
and cigarettes."
But a global move toward electric vehicles would eventually disrupt that
model, Charlebois noted, adding the Carrefour acquisition might be a way
for the retailer to diversify its strategy.
Bouchard, the current executive chairman of the company, declined to be
interviewed for this story.
'A STRETCH'
The Quebec chain grew in Canada through the 1980s and 1990s before
making its big break into the fragmented U.S. market in the early 2000s,
acquiring first the assets of Johnson Oil Co, and then Circle K Corp.
Once, when a banker suggested he was too ambitious, Bouchard switched
banks, according to a local media report.
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A man cycles past a Couche-Tard convenience store in Montreal,
Quebec, Canada January 13, 2021. REUTERS/Christinne Muschi/File
Photo/File Photo
Alain Bouchard is "an entrepreneurial hero, a self-made man, self-educated man,"
his friend Mitch Garber, who headed Montreal-based Cirque du Soleil, said.
Garber doesn't buy the French minister's arguments, calling them "a stretch".
"If Carrefour was making weapons for the French army I would understand," he
said. "They sell groceries."
Despite the endless amount of acquisitions, the company has retained its
entrepreneurial approach to business, a top-10 shareholder of Couche-Tard said.
Couche-Tard has missed deals before and looked for more.
Couche-Tard Chief Executive Brian Hannasch told Fortune in August "there will be
more activity caused by the pandemic," after the demise of a planned $5.6
billion acquisition of petrol station operator Caltex Australia in April.
Bouchard, who relaxes with opera and gives to the arts and culture, the
intellectually disabled, education and health care, retains some strong
shareholder support.
"It's a bit of a head scratcher," the top-10 shareholder in Couche-Tard said,
pointing to the minimal overlap in terms of both business model and geographic
region. But history is a guide for investors. "There is definitely a case to be
made that these guys have a great, great track record."
($1 = 1.2732 Canadian dollars)
(Additional reporting by Maiya Keida in Toronto, Pamela Barbaglia in London and
Gwénaëlle Barzic in Paris; Writing by Denny Thomas; Editing by Peter Henderson
and Jacqueline Wong)
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