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7-Eleven owner restructures to fight takeover

TOKYO (AFP) – The owner of 7-Eleven announced a major restructuring yesterday as it seeks to boost its share price and fend off what would be the biggest foreign takeover of a Japanese firm.

Seven & i Holdings rejected a USD40-billion takeover offer last month from Alimentation Couche-Tard (ACT) but the Canadian group has since then reportedly sweetened its offer.

7-Eleven konbini are a ubiquitous lifeline for Japan’s ageing population and a cherished one-stop shop for everything from rice balls to concert tickets to photocopies.

Second-quarter earnings published yesterday, however, showed flagging sales with the company cutting its full-year operating profit outlook.

Seven & i announced plans to spin off non-core businesses into a new holding company comprising its supermarket food business, speciality stores and other businesses.

People walk past a 7-Eleven convenience store in New York, United States. PHOTO: AFP

It said it would consider an initial public offering (IPO) of the new unit and bringing in strategic partners “to unlock value for the company’s shareholders and other stakeholders”. Creating the new unit allows Seven & i to focus solely on 7-Eleven – the world’s biggest convenience store chain with more than 85,000 outlets worldwide, a quarter of them in Japan.

An improved share price would also make a takeover attempt by ACT more expensive for the Canadian firm, while also easing pressure from shareholders pressing management to restructure. 7-Eleven began in the United States (US), but the franchise has been wholly owned by Seven & i since 2005.

Seven & i had said ACT’s first proposal of USD40 billion “grossly undervalues” its business and could face regulatory hurdles. The Japanese company said on Wednesday it had received a revised offer but declined to give details.

Bloomberg News and other media outlets reported that ACT had improved its offer by around 20 percent to around JPY7 trillion (USD47 billion). ACT declined to comment.

Seven & i shares have climbed more than 30 per cent since the takeover saga began but are still trading below the reported level of ACT’s new offer.

Its shares closed up 4.7 per cent on Wednesday, having initially surged nearly 12 per cent on news of the new ACT offer.

They edged down less than one per cent yesterday.

The new holding company will include 31 businesses, such as supermarket chains Ito-Yokado, York-Benimaru and baby goods shop Akachan Honpo.

Seven & i also said it plans to change its name, tentatively to 7-Eleven Corporation, which will be finalised at a shareholders’ meeting.

Couche-Tard, which began with one store in the city of Laval in 1980, now runs nearly 17,000 convenience store outlets worldwide.

In 2021, Couche-Tard dropped a takeover bid worth EUR16 billion (USD17 billion today) for French supermarket Carrefour after the French government said it would veto the deal over food security concerns.

It is unclear if Japan’s new government under Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba would do the same, but the finance ministry designated Seven & i a “core” industry last month.

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