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Business News/ Opinion / Unilever’s boldest defence? A Colgate or Nestle deal
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Unilever’s boldest defence? A Colgate or Nestle deal

Why would Unilever help Kraft Heinz save face? One possibility: CEO Paul Polman has a sale of its food assets in mind, and needs to keep potential buyers sweet

Almost 60% of Unilever’s revenue comes from personal products and homecare, things like soap and washing powder. Photo: BloombergPremium
Almost 60% of Unilever’s revenue comes from personal products and homecare, things like soap and washing powder. Photo: Bloomberg

London: Unilever was all smiles when Kraft Heinz Co. abandoned its attempt to buy the UK consumer company for $143 billion. In an unusual joint statement, the two companies referred to their “high regard" for each other.

This isn’t how bitterly contested takeover situations normally end. The Anglo-Dutch consumer giant must have wanted to end things amicably—or at least be seen to.

Why would Unilever help Kraft Heinz save face, given it manifestly doesn’t want to be acquired, let alone by the US ketchup maker?

ALSO READ | Unilever shares slide after Kraft Heinz withdraws $143 billion takeover bid

Sure, Unilever is a good-hearted corporate citizen. But it looks like it may need something from Kraft Heinz one day, and is showing the world the pair could do business.

One possibility: CEO Paul Polman has a sale of its food assets in mind, and needs to keep potential buyers sweet.

Kraft Heinz is all food. Almost 60% of Unilever’s revenue comes from personal products and homecare, things like soap and washing powder. A sale of the food business would let Polman preserve the company’s independence and culture, while meeting Kraft Heinz’s need for a deal that offers plenty of margin expansion potential.

So why not do such a deal now? Perhaps Kraft Heinz wasn’t keen, or it really wanted Unilever’s faster-growing household products and personal care assets.

ALSO READ | Unilever can’t breathe easily after fending off Kraft Heinz

Or, it’s possible Polman wasn’t ready. Conceivably, Unilever wants to bulk up its household and personal care operation before selling the food business.

How could it achieve that? A purchase of New York-based Colgate-Palmolive Co. would fit the bill. With a market value of $64 billion, it’s about half Unilever’s size, and would be a strategic match, as analysts at Exane point out.

Buying a storied US name might seem tricky in the current climate, but a generous offer may assuage Colgate’s managers, making the politics easier.

Alternatively, there is a messier way of getting to the same result—a deal with Swiss peer Nestle SA. The world’s largest food group, with a market value of 228 billion Swiss francs ($227 billion), suffers Unilever’s same problems of weak margins and low growth.

At the very least, it might make sense for the two companies to merge most of their food operations into a joint venture and spin that off, or sell it. There are surprisingly few overlaps: the Swiss have mostly exited ice cream outside North America, while Unilever still makes choc-ices, for instance.

ALSO READ | Kraft Heinz and Unilever’s food fight

An all-food combination would have combined sales of €32 billion ($34 billion). It could be worth €63 billion, based on the average sales multiple for the industry.

Ulf Mark Schneider, Nestle’s newish CEO, has indicated he’s not in the market for big deals, so no one should hold their breath. But a full merger of the pair, with a spin-off of the food unit, would create a global group focused on the faster growing businesses of personal care, pet care and food supplements.

Either way, the consumer industry needs deals to address weak profitability and growth.

Polman needs to ensure Unilever has the strongest negotiating hand as opportunities arise. For now, that means cutting costs and reducing the company’s conglomerate discount. That is where he can still earn his legacy. If he fails, others will do it for him. Bloomberg

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Published: 20 Feb 2017, 08:56 PM IST
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