UPDATE: Pepsi OKs $7.8 Billion Pacts To Buy Bottlers, Stock Jumps
August 04 2009 - 11:59AM
Dow Jones News
Ending a nearly four-month-long impasse, PepsiCo Inc. (PEP)
announced a sweetened $7.8 billion deal to buy its two largest
bottlers in a push to revive its North American beverage business
that has been fighting a slump in sales.
PepsiCo sweetened its April offer considerably, saying it will
pay $36.50 in cash and stock for the each share of Pepsi Bottling
Group Inc. (PBG) it doesn't already own, well above its original
bid of $29.50 a share. The cash and stock price for PepsiAmericas
Inc. (PAS) was raised to $28.50 a share from $23.27 a share.
Shares of the beverage and snacks giant and the bottlers' stocks
surged on the news. Since the first announcement of the bid in
April, there have been few indications from any of the three
companies on whether the deals would finally go through and at what
price. Tuesday's announcement removed the uncertainty that PepsiCo
investors had been facing and the sweetened prices for the bottlers
were largely in line with what several analysts had predicted.
PepsiCo also said the deal would give it annual pre-tax savings, or
synergies, of $300 million by 2012, higher that its original
forecast. Still, investors and analysts said that PepsiCo might be
able to wring out even more savings than its latest estimate.
"I'm glad its done," said Walter Todd, a portfolio manager of
Greenwood Capital, which holds PepsiCo shares. "I think PepsiCo is
lowballing the synergies." PepsiCo shares were recently up 5.4% to
$59.23.
PepsiCo had widely been expected to sweeten its bid, but
investors were uncertain about how high the beverage maker would go
and couldn't discount the possibility that PepsiCo could walk away
from the deal. In recent months amid that uncertainty, shares of
both bottlers traded well above the price of Pepsi's original bid
but didn't hit the levels that analysts predicted. Shares of both
bottlers rose further on Tuesday coming in line with PepsiCo's
announced deal price. Pepsi Bottling's stock was recently up 8.3%
to $36.40, and shares of Pepsi Americas gained 8.7% to $28.42.
"The price is in line with our expectations... We think getting
the deal done removes a big overhang on PepsiCo," said JPMorgan
analyst John Faucher in a research brief.
The deal will allow PepsiCo to control 80% of its North American
beverage distribution, a move the company has said would allow it
to cut costs as the region's soda sales have been stagnating.
PepsiCo Chief Executive Indra Nooyi said while the company has
had a constructive partnership with the bottlers for the past
decade, changes in the North American beverage industry "demand
that we create a more flexible, efficient and competitive system
that can drive growth" of Pepsi's products.
A primary sore spot for PepsiCo is Gatorade, whose new marketing
campaign for the sports drink hasn't stopped falling sales. Total
beverage volume in the Americas for PepsiCo fell 6% in the second
quarter.
-By Anjali Cordeiro, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2200;
anjali.cordeiro@dowjones.com
(Kevin Kingsbury contributed to this article.)