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Reuters
7 days ago
- Business
- Reuters
Breakingviews - Couche-Tard should have gone hostile on Seven & i
HONG KONG, July 17 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Be bold and go hostile, or don't bother at all. That's the message Canada's Alimentation Couche-Tard ( opens new tab is sending to foreigners eyeing acquisitions of Japanese companies. The company's withdrawal on Wednesday of its $46 billion non-binding proposal to purchase convenience store operator Seven & i (3382.T), opens new tab, along with a roughly 1,500-word rebuke, opens new tab of the process, suggests it's time for buyers to stop being friendly – and for Tokyo to firm up how it wants Japan Inc to behave. Couche-Tard's bid for the 7-Eleven owner was compelling at a 47% premium to the undisturbed share price nearly a year ago, but the soft approach allowed its reluctant target to drag its feet. In Tokyo, it was no secret that the company did not want to be bought; its founding family even tried its own white knight buyout before abandoning it. So it is unsurprising that Alain Bouchard, Couche-Tard's founder and executive chair concluded "there has been no sincere or constructive engagement" after the suitor raised its offer and signed a non-disclosure agreement. Seven & i calls these barbs "mischaracterizations", but the saga evokes Japan's past bad M&A, like Toshiba's long-drawn-out sale, which activists effectively kicked off in 2017. It also confirms that subsequently introduced guidelines for fair M&A and corporate takeovers aren't worth much. These were designed to revive the $4 trillion economy after decades of deflation. Companies are not on board, however. They make a show of acting in good faith but clutch to poison pill defences, opens new tab. Even Japan's largest publicly traded firm, Toyota Motor (7203.T), opens new tab, in June emerged as a leader of a highly controversial $33 billion deal that, as the Asian Corporate Governance Association puts it, opens new tab, "exposes the persistent frailties of Japan's corporate governance regime and the enduring power of entrenched interests". Couche-Tard's decision not to go hostile no doubt stemmed from worrying doing otherwise would scare off the Japanese management team. It also faced antitrust hurdles in the United States and clamouring about the national interest in Japan. Yet there is a growing contingent of bankers and lawyers in the Asian country who view cultural issues as outdated hurdles to transformative inbound deals; they are advising their clients to take a firmer and, if necessary, hostile approach from the beginning. True, Couche-Tard succeeded in forcing Seven & i to replace its CEO with a foreigner, Stephen Dacus, and revise its standalone value creation plan. But without a suitor applying pressure, some commitments could fade over time. One of these is a 2 trillion yen ($13.5 billion) buyback over the next five years funded in part by the agreed 815 billion yen sale of the group's supermarket business to Bain Capital; another is a future stock market listing of its North American convenience store unit that targets an equity value of at least 1 trillion yen. Shareholders have concluded that Seven & i was better off with a buyer too. The stock only fell 6% on Thursday, putting it 18% above its pre-deal level. But it is languishing one-fifth below Couche-Tard's offer. The Canadians did not get what they wanted, and arguably nor did Tokyo. Neither tried hard enough. Follow Una Galani on Linkedin, opens new tab and X, opens new tab.


Times
25-06-2025
- Business
- Times
Shell in talks to acquire BP in potential £57bn oil deal
Shell is reported to be in early stage talks to acquire rival BP, which is valued at just over £57 billion. The talks are early stage but active, according to The Wall Street Journal. The potential tie-up could turn out to be the largest corporate oil deal since the $83 billion megamerger that created Exxon Mobil. It would also be the biggest M&A deal of the year so far, in a market that has been rattled by President Trump's trade war and other geopolitical tensions. A Shell spokesman told the Journal: 'As we have said many times before, we are sharply focused on capturing the value in Shell through continuing to focus on performance, discipline and simplification.' BP's US-traded shares were up 7 per cent after the news emerged while Shell's slid 3.6 per cent. Acquiring BP would put Shell on better footing to challenge larger US competitors. The activist investor Elliott Investment Management, which owns more than 5 per cent of BP's shares, has pushed for changes at the energy company. A Shell-BP deal would be the latest in a wave of M&A activity across the energy sector as the producers look to achieve greater economies of scale. America's Chevron is still working to close its $53 billion deal for Hess.
Yahoo
19-05-2025
- Automotive
- Yahoo
Toyota Industries to accept Toyota group's planned tender offer, Kyodo says
TOKYO (Reuters) -Toyota Industries Corp plans to accept a tender offer by Toyota Motor Corp, its chairman Akio Toyoda and others, and is making arrangements to announce its intention as early in May, Kyodo news agency reported on Monday. Bloomberg News reported last month Toyota Motor Chairman Toyoda has proposed acquiring supplier Toyota Industries in a possible 6 trillion yen ($41 billion) deal. Following the report, Toyota said it was considering a potential buyout of the key parts supplier. If realised, that would be a landmark deal for Japan Inc that transforms its most influential corporate group. Toyota and Toyota Industries did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the Kyodo report. ($1 = 144.8700 yen)