Coca-Cola bottles African stake from ABInbev
Coca-Cola will also buy AB InBev's bottling operations in Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Swaziland, Lesotho, El Salvador and Honduras.
Brussels - Soft drinks giant Coca-Cola has agreed to pay more than three billion US dollars to recently-merged AB InBev for control of Africa's biggest soft drinks bottling company, both companies said yesterday.
On merging with SABMiller in September, Belgian-Brazilian giant AB InBev found itself with 54.5% in Coca-Cola Beverages Africa (CCBA) and Coca-Cola said in October it would exercise its pre-emptive rights on the stake.
CCBA runs operations in South Africa, Namibia, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Ghana, Mayotte and Comoros.
Coca-Cola will pay US$3.15 billion for the stake in CCBA which was formed as a joint venture between Coca-Cola and SABMiller in 2014, becoming Africa's biggest soft drinks bottler accounting for about 40% of the continent's Coca-Cola sales.
Coca-Cola said it also agreed to buy AB InBev's bottling operations in Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Swaziland, Lesotho, El Salvador and Honduras for an undisclosed amount.
The US giant only intends, however, to hold on these operations temporarily "until they can be refranchised to other partners", the statement said.
It is already talking to some "highly-qualified" candidates to take over the territories "as soon as practical".
Its existing bottling partners include Coca-Cola European Partners and Coca-Cola Hellenic. AB InBev has now raised some US$27 billion from divestments ofSABMiller's European, US and Chinese interests, recouping more than a quarter of the US$97.7 billion it paid for the world's second largest brewer.
The takeover of the CCBA stake is to be completed by the end of next year.
The transactions are subject to relevant regulatory and minority approvals. – Nampa/AFP/Reuters
On merging with SABMiller in September, Belgian-Brazilian giant AB InBev found itself with 54.5% in Coca-Cola Beverages Africa (CCBA) and Coca-Cola said in October it would exercise its pre-emptive rights on the stake.
CCBA runs operations in South Africa, Namibia, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Ghana, Mayotte and Comoros.
Coca-Cola will pay US$3.15 billion for the stake in CCBA which was formed as a joint venture between Coca-Cola and SABMiller in 2014, becoming Africa's biggest soft drinks bottler accounting for about 40% of the continent's Coca-Cola sales.
Coca-Cola said it also agreed to buy AB InBev's bottling operations in Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Swaziland, Lesotho, El Salvador and Honduras for an undisclosed amount.
The US giant only intends, however, to hold on these operations temporarily "until they can be refranchised to other partners", the statement said.
It is already talking to some "highly-qualified" candidates to take over the territories "as soon as practical".
Its existing bottling partners include Coca-Cola European Partners and Coca-Cola Hellenic. AB InBev has now raised some US$27 billion from divestments ofSABMiller's European, US and Chinese interests, recouping more than a quarter of the US$97.7 billion it paid for the world's second largest brewer.
The takeover of the CCBA stake is to be completed by the end of next year.
The transactions are subject to relevant regulatory and minority approvals. – Nampa/AFP/Reuters
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