Brazil’s Sadia Wants to Take Over Perdigí£o. Offer Too Low, Says Perdigí£o

Brazilian food company Sadia has decided to purchase stock control of Perdigão, their main competitor. Sadia plans on buying 100% of Perdigão’s shares for 3.7 billion reais (US$ 1.76 billion), creating Brazil’s fourth biggest exporter.

The new company would also generate in exports alone US$ 5.5 billion, becoming the world’s fourth largest meat processor behind Tyson Foods, Smithfield Foods and Pilgrim’s Pride Corp., all from the US.

They would be a giant with 81,000 employees, using 16,00 rural producers, 38 distribution centers and 26 food-processing plants. Sadia/Perdigão would slaughter every year 1.2 billion chickens, 31.9 million turkeys and 7.4 million pigs.

Sadia’s objective is to become an important competitor in the international market. The greater part of the money to be used in the purchase – R$ 2.7 billion (US$ 1.28 billion) – comes from a loan by the bank ABN Amro. The company has R$ 1 billion (US$ 476.92 million) in cash for the operation.

Analysts predict that Perdigão’s shareholders will accept the offer that’s been presented as a "voluntary offer" by Sadia. Perdigão is controlled by seven Brazilian pension funds.

Nildemar Secches, Perdigão’s president, however, called the 27.88 reais (US$ 12,61) per share offer "extremely low" and commented on the "voluntary" classification: "All over the world this kind of offer is called hostile."

The deal would be the biggest fusion in the Brazilian industry since July 1999, when beer and soft drink company Brahma bought its competition, Antarctica, to create AmBev.

The purchase will need not only the approval of Perdigão’s shareholders, but also the OK from Brazil’s Antitrust Authority, the CADE (Conselho Administrativo de Defesa Econômica).

Tags:

You May Also Like

Is Powerhouse Brazil’s Lula Playing Bush’s Game?

Brazil’s active intervention to de-escalate the Bolivian conflict went beyond rhetoric and statements, showcasing ...

Among World’s 100 Best Schools Brazil’s USP Advances 26 Points

Brazil's USP, the University of São Paulo, was considered the 87th best university in ...

Inmates show in Brazil head of a beheaded prisoner

What Did Brazil Learn from the Carandiru Massacre? Nothing, It Seems.

On July 17, 2005, dust clouds engulfed the former site of São Paulo’s House ...

The Smartest Thing China Could Do Right Now: Invest US$ 200 Billion in Brazil

On March 2, 2007, Brazzil magazine published the original article of this series of ...

Luxury Has Become a US$ 5 Billion Industry in Brazil

Brazilian companies prevail in the country's luxury products market. A survey conducted by consultancy ...

The Agitator Is Quiet

Francisco Julião used to defend agrarian reform forcefully arguing that it had to be ...

Brazil Airport Restrictions Won’t Affect TAM, Airline Says

Brazilian leading airline TAM informed that measures announced Thursday, September 13, by Brazil's Minister ...

Brazil to Export 3 Billion Liters of Ethanol This Year

The Arab Brazilian Chamber of Commerce is participating in the International Ethanol Workshop today, ...

Brazil Breaks Territory into ‘Little Countries’ to Avoid Spread of Chicken Disease

Beginning in 2006, poultry production in Brazil is expected to adopt the model used ...

With Venezuela’s Help Brazil Builds First Oil Refinery in 20 Years

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva visited two municipalities in the state of ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`