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Sapporo acquisition of Sleeman on tap
Last Updated Fri, 11 Aug 2006 21:25:51 EDT
CBC News

Sleeman Breweries Ltd., Canada's third-largest beer producer, agreed Friday to a $400-million takeover by Japan's Sapporo Breweries Ltd.

Sleeman shareholders have been asked to approve a takeover bid from Sapporo. Sleeman shareholders have been asked to approve a takeover bid from Sapporo.

Sapporo will offer $17.50 a share in cash to buy Sleeman, which put itself up for sale earlier this year and had been weighing offers for the company. The total figure for the deal includes debt.

Chairman and CEO John Sleeman agreed to tender all of his shares to the bid, according to a joint release.

"In Sapporo's offer, we not only received fair value for shareholders, but confidence that Sleeman has an owner with the financial resources and track record to continue to grow and build Sleeman's national portfolio of premium brands," Sleeman said.

"This transaction will allow Sleeman to be more competitive in the premium beer category and continue to build the business. Today's announcement also provides a strong future for both Sleeman employees and Sleeman brands."

Sleeman announced Thursday that profit rose 41 per cent in the second quarter to $3.5 million, or 21 cents a share. But revenue was essentially flat, at $57.8 million.

The company's shares fell 21 cents on Friday, closing on the Toronto Stock Exchange at $14.83.

It markets and distributes imported brands like Sapporo, and has also provided contract production for the Japanese brewer's products.

"We have developed a strong relationship with Sleeman through our contract brewing arrangement and this acquisition enables Sapporo to continue to expand Sleeman's quality brewing heritage," said Nobuhiro Hasiba, Sapporo managing director.

Should two-thirds of Sleeman shareholders approve the deal, the transaction is expected to close by mid-October.

Last of the top three

If approved, Sleeman would become the last of the top three Canadian brewers to accept foreign ownership.

Sleeman, based in Guelph, Ont., brews a wide range of beers, from the premium Sleeman and Upper Canada brands to low-cost, high-volume "value brands." The company traces its roots back to 1834 when founder John H. Sleeman established himself as a brewer.

Sapporo was established just a few decades later. Sapporo Holdings Limited has a value of $4.3-billion, which also includes real estate, restaurant and non-alcoholic beverage segments.

It had been rumoured that Molson Coors Brewing Co., Labatt Brewing Co. Ltd. and Royal Grolsch NV of the Netherlands were also interested in Sleeman.
sky of mind
I sure hope the Micro-brew industry is as popular in Canada as it is in the US.
Pinget
Budweiser is the last American-owned brewery.
sky of mind
Adolph Coors Jr, the great Rocky Mountaiun conservative sold out to a furinner?
soon2b
Guess they lost:
QUOTE
Molson Coors bids to acquire Canada's Sleeman Breweries
Denver-based firm could control half of nation's beer market
STORY TOOLS
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By David Milstead, Rocky Mountain News
August 1, 2006
Canada's largest independent brewer is for sale, and if Molson Coors puts in a winning bid, the company could control half the country's lucrative beer market.
Guelph, Ontario-based -Sleeman Breweries Ltd. has been working since May with an investment bank to examine its strategy. The company set a Monday deadline for interested bidders, according to the Globe & Mail, one of Canada's national, Toronto-based newspapers.
Denver-based Molson Coors, which owns Coors Light and Molson Canadian, and InBev, owner of Labatt's and the Canadian distributor of Budweiser, are two of the interested parties, the newspaper reported. Each company has roughly 42 percent of the country's beer market.
Sleeman, a family-controlled company that trades on the Toronto Stock Exchange, sells about 7 percent of the beer in Canada through nine Sleeman brands, plus the ownership, licensing and distribution of other beers such as Stroh's Canada.
At current market values, Sleeman's is worth about $220 million.
Molson Coors spokesman Paul De La Plante declined to comment, citing company policy against statements about merger discussions. A Sleeman spokeswoman also declined to comment
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/othe...4884543,00.html
rcorporon
It wouldn't have mattered. Molson got bought by Coors a few years ago, so it still would have been foreign owned.
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