British brothers buy Asda from Walmart for $8.8bn

business
British Brothers Buy Asda From Walmart For $8.8Bn
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Digital Desk staff

The billionaire Issa brothers and private equity group TDR Capital have bought Asda from Walmart in a deal which gives the British supermarket chain an enterprise value of $8.8 billion (€7.5 billion) and the buyers a platform to roll out smaller stores.

Mohsin and Zuber Issa, who founded petrol station operator EG Group nearly two decades ago, are taking Asda back under British ownership for the first time since 1999, when U.S. retail giant Walmart paid 6.7 billion pounds for it.

Judith McKenna, president and chief executive of Walmart International said "The Issa brothers have a reputation for good brand partnerships, for convenience and for growth and that’s really what we were interested in for Asda."

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McKenna said the deal was not about job cuts and the new owners said they are targeting growth by expanding into convenience shops from its large supermarket and online operations, bringing Asda more in line with market leader Tesco and No. 2 Sainsbury's.

The Issas said they wanted to utilise their experience to help "build a differentiated business" at Britain's third-biggest supermarket chain, in which Walmart will retain an unspecified minority stake, as well as a commercial relationship and a board seat.

Convenience shift

Retail veteran Roger Burnley will remain as CEO of Asda in a deal which ratings agency Moody's said allows Walmart to continue to refocus its international efforts on markets with more long-term upside, such as India and China.

McKenna would not say for how long Walmart has committed to remain an investor or comment on the possibility of an initial public offering (IPO).

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"The brothers and TDR will help make decisions about what that future path looks like," she said.

The new owners said they will invest more than 1 billion over three years to keep prices low, develop supply chains and in e-commerce, in addition to convenience stores.

British finance minister Rishi Sunak welcomed the deal, which will see Asda retain its headquarters in the northern English city of Leeds.Last year Walmart's attempt to sell Asda to Sainsbury's for 7.3 billion pounds was thwarted by Britain's Competition and Markets Authority and McKenna said she expected the regulator to also consider the new deal.

Britain's highly competitive supermarket sector has been upended by the COVID-19 crisis, which sparked a jump in sales - and costs - as shoppers stocked up on goods during lockdowns.Reuters

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