
Danone eyes PE's 30% to deepen French connection with Epigamia
People said others may also show interest in Verlinvest's stake, which could force Danone to match any rival offers.
'Given the heightened consumer and investor interest in health and wellness brands, consumer goods companies are also being tapped for a stake sale, given Epigamia's brand equity, specially in urban markets,' said one of the persons cited above.
'Negotiations Revived'
'Negotiations have been revived and are in the exploratory stages. It is not yet clear if Verlinvest will exit fully or dilute partial stake. It will depend on the valuation,' the person said. Epigamia tapped global bank Investec about 18 months ago to scout for a buyer for the company. At the time, large consumer goods companies such as Dabur and ITC were approached but a deal could not materialise due to a mismatch in valuation expectations.Epigamia owner Drums Food International and Danone did not respond to email queries. Verlinvest and its Singapore-based managing director Arjun Anand also did not respond to queries.
Epigamia – a maker of yogurt, smoothies, desserts and shakes – competes with Nestle, Mother Dairy and Amul, in addition to half a dozen direct-to-consumer brands. The brand's founder Rohan Mirchandani passed away last December, at age 42. He had cofounded Drums Food International, which owns the brand, in 2013. The brand's other cofounders and co-investors are Uday Thakker, Rahul Jain, Ganesh Krishnamoorthy and Ankur Goel.
Epigamia sells 24 varieties of products, across general trade and ecommerce, and quick platforms and its own online store, according to a January statement by the company when it announced its foray into the zero-sugar protein milk shake category.
Jain, a cofounder, currently steers Epigamia as its chief executive officer. The company had a valuation of Rs 1,250 crore as of December 2023, according to Tracxn.
Initially backed by DSG Consumer Partners and Verlinvest, it got Rs 182-crore investment from Danone Manifesto Ventures in 2019. At the time, high-net-worth individuals such as Cipla founding family's Samina Vaziralli co-invested in the company. Bollywood actress Deepika Padukone-backed investment firm KA Enterprises too invested in Epigamia in 2019.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
29 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Singapore home prices rise for third quarter on domestic demand
By Low De Wei (Bloomberg) – Singapore private home prices rose for a third straight quarter, buoyed by local demand. An index for prices of private residences climbed 0.5% in the second quarter from the previous three months, according to preliminary figures released by the Urban Redevelopment Authority Tuesday. That extends a 0.8% increase in the first quarter. The data suggest Singapore's property market remains resilient even after sales of new homes lost momentum in recent months. The Trump administration's push for global tariffs has cast doubt on the outlook for the trade-dependent economy, prompting some homebuyers to hesitate and developers to delay large-scale project launches. New private home sales fell to a five-month low in May, an earlier report showed. Final home price figures are scheduled to be released on July 25. The financial hub has been grappling with a property price surge in recent years, prompting authorities to implement cooling measures, including higher levies on foreign purchases in 2023. A key focus has been curbing resale prices for public housing, which accommodates the majority of the population. In a sign that policymakers are sensing a softening in the property market, the government scaled back the amount of land slated for auction for private housing units in the second half of the year. Instead, it expanded the so-called reserve list, where sites are only put up for tender if sufficient developer interest emerges. Analysts are divided on the outlook for the residential market this year. Morgan Stanley estimates private home prices will decline by 3% in 2025, ending an eight-year rally. Others, including Citigroup and Bloomberg Intelligence, anticipate gains of as much as 3%. Still, some pockets of interest remain strong. Nine bids were received for one site at Dunearn Road in one of the city's priciest districts last month. That's the most for a government-sold private residential site since 2021, according to CBRE Group. More stories like this are available on ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Gold Edges Higher on US Rate-Cut Bets and Dollar Weakness
(Bloomberg) -- Gold rose for a second day on optimism the Federal Reserve will resume rate cuts later this year, while investors continued to monitor US trade talks ahead of a July 9 US tariff deadline. Struggling Downtowns Are Looking to Lure New Crowds Philadelphia Transit System Votes to Cut Service by 45%, Hike Fares Squeezed by Crowds, the Roads of Central Park Are Being Reimagined Sao Paulo Pushes Out Favela Residents, Drug Users to Revive Its City Center Sprawl Is Still Not the Answer Bullion traded near $3,310 an ounce, after rising 0.9% on Monday as traders priced in higher odds of at least two US rate reductions in 2025. A jobs report on Thursday also looms as a potential catalyst for a drop in yields on Treasuries — a scenario that typically tends to benefit gold. Gold is up by about a quarter this year and is trading less than $200 short of April's record high, supported by elevated trade and geopolitical risks. Uncertainty over the economic impact of Trump's tariff agenda and a rush to get out of US assets has seen a gauge of the dollar drop almost 11% in the first six months of year, the worst performance since 1973. 'Gold, despite its recent losses, has the most potential to gain in the short term if the US dollar continues to decline,' Commonwealth Bank of Australia analyst Vivek Dhar said in a note. Spot gold rose 0.3% to $3,311.64 an ounce as of 8:44 a.m. in Singapore. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index slipped 0.1%, after falling 0.5% Monday. Platinum climbed 0.6% to $1,367.10 an ounce after surging almost 29% in June, its best ever monthly performance. The rally has been driven by signs of extreme tightness in the spot market amid strong demand from Chinese jewelry manufacturers, as well as speculative buying led by the US and China. Silver and palladium also advanced. America's Top Consumer-Sentiment Economist Is Worried How to Steal a House SNAP Cuts in Big Tax Bill Will Hit a Lot of Trump Voters Too Pistachios Are Everywhere Right Now, Not Just in Dubai Chocolate Inside Gap's Last-Ditch, Tariff-Addled Turnaround Push ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Dollar feeble as Trump's tax bill and tariffs weigh
By Ankur Banerjee SINGAPORE (Reuters) -The U.S. dollar languished at its weakest against the euro since September 2021 on Tuesday, as President Donald Trump's spending bill stoked fiscal worries and uncertainty around trade deals continued to weigh on sentiment. Investors have also started wagering on a quicker pace of monetary policy easing by the Federal Reserve this year ahead of a slew of U.S. economic data this week, headlined by Thursday's nonfarm payrolls report. That spurred dollar-selling, leaving the euro perched at a near four-year high of $1.179. The single currency surged 13.8% in the January-June period, its strongest-ever first half performance, LSEG data showed. Sterling was steady at $1.3737, not far from the three-and-a-half-year high it touched last week, while the Japanese yen firmed to 143.68 per dollar. The yen has gained 9% in the first half of the year, its strongest performance since 2016. The dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency against six others, slipped to 96.688, its lowest since February 2022. Investors are grappling with uncertainty over the U.S. Senate's efforts to pass Trump's tax-cut and spending bill, which faces internal party divisions over its projected $3.3 trillion addition to the national debt. The fiscal concerns have dampened sentiment and prompted some investors to diversify. The world's reserve currency is down more than 10%, its biggest first-half dive since the era of free-floating currencies began in the early 1970s. "In 2025, the U.S. exceptionalism narrative has been called into question. Treasury auction demand has been under pressure in recent months, and foreign investor appetite has reduced," said Nathan Hamilton, investment analyst for fixed income at Aberdeen Investments. "Bear steepening of the Treasury yield curve, coupled with USD weakness, suggests financial markets are less willing to look through the relative credit risk metrics of the U.S. on the back of its status as the world's reserve currency." Meanwhile, Trump has continued hammering the Fed to ease monetary policy, sending Fed Chair Jerome Powell a list of central bank interest rates around the world adorned with handwritten commentary saying the U.S. rate should be between Japan's 0.5% and Denmark's 1.75%. Trump's constant tirade against the Fed and Powell has fuelled investor worries about the central bank's independence and its credibility. Trump cannot fire Powell over a policy dispute, but last week urged him to resign. Investor focus will be on comments from Powell, who joins several other central bank chiefs at the European Central Bank forum in Sintra, Portugal, on Tuesday. Traders are now pricing in 67 basis points of easing from the Fed this year. "There are many reasons not to like the USD. Some are structural, like the erratic trade policies and fiscal risks," said Moh Siong Sim, a currency strategist at Bank of Singapore. "They have earlier caused the USD to weaken despite its relative yield advantage. But the risk of a more dovish Federal Reserve eroding USD's yield advantage is the latest source of USD weakness." Thursday's nonfarm payrolls is expected to show 110,000 new jobs in June, down from 139,000 in May, according to a Reuters poll of economists. The unemployment rate was expected to have crept higher to 4.3%, from 4.2% last month. With the July 9 deadline for Trump's tariffs fast approaching investors are also keeping an eye on trade deals between the U.S. and its partners although there have not been many agreements so far. Trump expressed frustration with U.S.-Japan trade negotiations as Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent warned that countries could be notified of sharply higher tariffs despite good-faith negotiations. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data