InBev Finally Woos Anheuser-Busch with Higher Offer, Top Billing





Anheuser-Busch Companies Inc. (BUD) will end more than 150 years as a family-controlled company with its acceptance of a $70-per-share offer from Belgium-based InBev NV, which puts a $52 billion price tag on the iconic American brewer.

The boards of both the St. Louis-based Anheuser-Busch and InBev have approved the all-cash deal, according to a joint statement released today (Monday).

Anheuser-Busch’s popular Budweiser and Bud Light beers will join InBev’s stable of beers that includes such well-known brand names as Stella Artois, Beck’s and Brahma. The resulting merger will produce the largest beermaker by volume, as the newly formed entity will surpass the current title-holder, the British-owned SAB Miller PLC (OTC: SBMRY).

“Together, Anheuser-Busch and InBev will be able to accomplish much more than each can on its own,” InBev Chief Executive Officer Carlos Brito, who will helm the new company, said in a joint statement. “We have been successful business partners for quite some time, and this is the natural next step for us in an increasingly competitive global environment.”

The takeover battle has been hotly contested for months in both the boardroom and the courtroom since InBev’s original $46 billion offer for Anheuser-Busch in May. Fierce opposition from the board, led by Chief Executive Officer August Busch IV, was finally overcome by InBev’s bid increase of 7.7% and the Belgian brewer’s agreement to name the newly formed global entity Anheuser-Busch InBev.

“This is about giving InBev a U.S. presence and this is the most effective way they can see to achieve that,” Grant Saligari, a beverage industry analyst at Commonwealth Securities Ltd. in Sydney, told Bloomberg News. “Consumers are very emotionally attached to their beers. A peaceful deal helps maintain that.”

Aneheuser-Busch and InBev Merger Just One of Many

This merger is the latest in a string of consolidations in the largely mature global beverage industry, as skyrocketing grain costs and softening economies have led struggling brewers to seek economies of scale. Two of the largest brewers, InBev and SAB Miller, are themselves creations of mergers that took place within the past 10 years, The New York Times reported.

In January, Carlsberg A/S and Heineken N.V. (HINKY) agreed to buy Scottish & Newcastle PLC for $15.4 billion. Late last year, British-owned SAB Miller PLC (OTC: SBMRY) and Canada’s Molson Coors Brewing Co. (TAP), agreed to merge their U.S. brewing operations.

Once InBev acquires Anheuser-Busch, it will leave The Boston Beer Co. Inc. (SAM), maker of the popular Samuel Adams beer brand, one of the last large domestic brewers still under U.S. ownership.

By Jennifer Yousfi
Money Morning

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