0.4 C
New York
Wednesday, December 25, 2024
HomeBusinessInternational BusinessPepsiCo buys Pioneer Foods in Africa push

PepsiCo buys Pioneer Foods in Africa push

Date:

Related stories

Celebrity entrepreneurs: 10 Bollywood stars who own luxury brands

Bollywood celebrities are often celebrated for their talent and...

Rahul Gandhi criticizes Hindutva, BJP accuses him of insulting all Hindus | Watch video

India's leader of opposition and Congress MP Rahul Gandhi...

Chicago Indian-American doctor faces 20 years for healthcare fraud

A 51-year-old Indian-American doctor from Chicago, Mona Ghosh, has...

Same-sex couple married in India’s Gurgaon, video goes viral

While India struggles with the same-sex law, after the...

US beverage and food giant PepsiCo has agreed to buy South Africa’s Pioneer Foods for about 24.4 billion rand (£1.4 billion), a company executive said Friday, in a bold move into the African market.

“This transaction is all about growth. We are looking to expand our footprint,” PepsiCo executive Eugene Willemsen, who will head up the operation from Cape Town, told Bloomberg News.

He said that the company was seeking to expand aggressively in sub-Saharan Africa, a region which is expected to double in population to 2.2 billion people by 2050.

The purchase will add local brands such as Weet-Bix breakfast cereal and Ceres fruit juice to the PepsiCo roster that includes Frito-Lay, Gatorade, Pepsi-Cola and Tropicana.

PepsiCo offered 110 rand a share for Pioneer, a premium of about 56 percent.

- Advertisement -

A joint statement said that Pioneer Foods had “a robust, locally relevant product portfolio” to offer to PepsiCo, which would gain “a solid beachhead for expansion” from the deal.

Pretoria-based Pioneer Foods exports to 80 countries in Africa and beyond, and has joint ventures in Namibia, Botswana, Kenya and Nigeria.

It registered 20.2 billion rand in sales in 2018.

The deal builds on PepsiCo’s $3.2 billion buyout of Israel’s SodaStream last year.

Pioneer has been struggling in South Africa’s weak consumer market, but Willemsen said PepsiCo was “very positive” about the country’s prospects.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here