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Carlsberg seen thirsting for Tsingtao in Asia

The $15 billion company is eyeing about a half-dozen potential candidates, especially in Asia

Carlsberg
Bloomberg Stockholm/London
Last Updated : Nov 12 2013 | 2:38 AM IST
Carlsberg A/S's pursuit of faster growth in Asia may make takeover targets out of Tsingtao Brewery Co and Beijing Yanjing Brewery Co.

The Danish brewer's controlling shareholder signaled last month that it will give Carlsberg more leeway to pursue deals. The $15 billion company is eyeing about a half-dozen potential candidates, especially in Asia, including Tsingtao and Yanjing, for a possible purchase, said a person with knowledge of the matter, who declined to be identified as the discussions are private. The Chinese companies each produce some of the most popular beer brands in China, the world's biggest beer market.

Carlsberg holds a distant fourth place in the global beer market by volume after a wave of consolidation led by Anheuser-Busch InBev NV, SABMiller Plc and Heineken NV. In the past five years, Carlsberg largely held back while its bigger rivals took part in deals valued collectively at almost $110 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Now, Carlsberg is among brewers seeking to expand in Asia, one of the industry's fastest-growing regions.

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For Carlsberg, "they wish to grow their size and they also want to get more growth into the business," Casper Blom, an analyst at Svenska Handelsbanken AB, said in a phone interview. "Asia would be top of the agenda."

Carlsberg shares traded up 0.6 per cent at 552.50 kroner at 9:35 am in Copenhagen. The stock is little changed this year.

Deal leeway
The maker of Tuborg beer and Somersby cider will have greater flexibility to go on a buying spree of its own after the controlling Carlsberg Foundation said it will drop the requirement that it hold at least 25 per cent of the share capital in the brewer. The foundation, set up by Carlsberg founder J C Jacobsen in 1876 to preserve the Copenhagen-based brewer's independence, will continue to control at least 51 per cent of voting rights.

The charter was last amended in 2007 in a move that allowed Carlsberg to sell shares to help finance its portion of the company's joint purchase with Heineken of British brewer Scottish & Newcastle for a total of about $15 billion.

Since that purchase in April 2008, Carlsberg announced deals valued at a combined $1.2 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Of the almost $110 billion of deals completed or announced by bigger competitors, the largest was InBev NV's $52 billion takeover of Anheuser-Busch Cos in November 2008, the data show.

Asia agenda
The consolidation left Carlsberg fourth to the industry's three biggest brewers by volume as of last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The company's revenue of 67 billion Danish kroner ($12 billion) last year was about half the revenue of its next-biggest rival Heineken.

The Carlsberg Foundation's latest move gives the company a chance to catch up on lost ground and expand in Asia, a region where the brewer is seeing the most growth. Organic beer volume, which excludes acquisitions and disposals, rose 7 per cent in Asia for Carlsberg in the first half of the year compared with a year earlier. That compares with 3 per cent growth for its eastern European business and a 5 per cent decline for western Europe. Asia last year accounted for 21 per cent of Carlsberg's total beer volume.

"Asia still remains an important part of our M&A agenda," Carlsberg spokesman Ben Morton said in an e-mailed reply to questions about the company's future deal plans. The company offered in March to buy shares in Chongqing Brewery Co to increase its stake to as much as 60 per cent.

Big deal?
Carlsberg may first seek acquisitions among assets in which it already holds a stake, said Philip Morrisey, an analyst at Berenberg Bank in London. The company has full ownership of breweries or joint ventures in seven Chinese provinces, mostly in the western part of the country, according to its website. Even so, other purchases in existing and new markets are also avenues that Carlsberg is likely to explore, he said.

Changing the charter of the foundation signals that Carlsberg may be considering something bigger than just increasing existing stakes, according to Svenska Handelsbanken's Blom.

"If they are lucky they will be able to buy one of the larger Chinese companies that might come up for sale in the next couple of years," Morten Imsgard, an analyst at Sydbank A/S, said in a phone interview. "The most likely candidates are Yanjing Brewery and maybe Tsingtao."

Attractive Targets
Yanjing and Tsingtao are among the biggest brewers in China and attractive targets for western companies keen to grab a slice of the world's biggest beer market by volume.

Cui Mei Liu, a Qingdao-based spokeswoman for Tsingtao, didn't respond to Bloomberg News inquiries. Guang Xue Ding, a Beijing-based spokesman for Yanjing, couldn't be reached after office hours.

Carlsberg is also considering San Miguel Brewery Inc. in the Philippines, the person familiar with the matter said. The brewery, which sells nine of 10 beers in the Philippines, is attracting suitors keen to boost their presence in emerging markets.

San Miguel Corp. -- which owns the brewery together with Japan's biggest drinks maker Kirin Holdings Inc. -- has said that several bidders are vying for its 51 percent holding in the company.

"I can't stop anybody from offering to buy," San Miguel President Ramon Ang said in a phone message, which was left in response to a request for any further comment. "If their offers are legitimate, I have to take it up to the SMC parent board."

High Valuations
A takeover of Yanjing may be complicated by the Chinese government's stake in the company while Tsingtao, with a market value of $10 billion, might be too big and "too big a mouthful for Carlsberg to handle," according to Imsgard. What's more, with growth in the Asian beer market driving up valuations of brewers in the region, there's a risk of overpaying, he said.

"They need to ensure they are not panicking and paying up too much cash to get hold of some of the more interesting players in the region," Imsgard said.

Tsingtao shares surged to a record last month, while Yanjing's stock climbed to the highest in more than a year.

Even so, to help narrow the gap with competitors and expand in growing markets, it may be a price worth paying.

"Carlsberg is at the moment lagging behind," Imsgard said. "It is important to keep up with larger competitors."

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First Published: Nov 12 2013 | 12:21 AM IST

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