My Blog
Food

New Zealand’s Comvita receives offshore takeover offer

New Zealand’s Comvita receives offshore takeover offer
New Zealand’s Comvita receives offshore takeover offer


New Zealand’s Comvita has received an offer from a “credible offshore party” to acquire all of its shares, a day after booking a first-half loss.

The NZX-listed honey producer has attracted a “highly conditional unsolicited, indicative, non-binding proposal”, according to a statement released today (22 February).

Comvita added the indicated offer price represents “a significant premium to the current share price”. The company’s share price closed yesterday at NZ$1.79 ($1.11), but jumped 25% to NZ$2.25 by the close of trading in New Zealand today.

The unnamed party has indicated it would prefer to implement any acquisition by a “negotiated scheme of arrangement”. Comvita said it has concluded an initial exchange of information with the offshore party.

It wrote: “The board has decided to provide further access to confirmatory due diligence information with a view to determining whether the NBIO [non-binding offer] may evolve into a formal proposal that might be in the best interests of all shareholders.”

Yesterday, the Manuka honey maker posted a net loss after tax of NZ$3.2m for the six months ended 31 December 2023, compared to a profit of NZ$4.2m the year before.

Access the most comprehensive Company Profiles
on the market, powered by GlobalData. Save hours of research. Gain competitive edge.

Company Profile – free
sample

Your download email will arrive shortly

We are confident about the
unique
quality of our Company Profiles. However, we want you to make the most
beneficial
decision for your business, so we offer a free sample that you can download by
submitting the below form

By GlobalData

Comvita marked a 7.8% drop in revenue year-on-year, reaching NZ$103m due to “weaker consumer sentiment in mainland China” and losing “some distribution with one customer” in North America.

Greater China revenue was NZ$45m, down 13%, and North America revenue was NZ$13m, a decline of 37%. Mainland China revenue for the half-year was NZ$33m, down 19% from the previous year.

The business “expects a steady improvement in consumption through the second half” and has “identified NZ$8m of specific cost savings to be made in H2 FY24”, according to a filing.

CEO David Banfield said: “After three and a half years of consistent performance growing both top- and bottom-line, in line with our market guidance and strategic plan, we are disappointed in this result, which reflects current trading conditions.

“The team and I are absolutely focused on doing everything possible to ensure a return to our track record of delivering consistent top- and bottom-line growth.”


Related posts

‘The Vilna Vegetarian Cookbook’ Was Ahead of Its Time

newsconquest

FMCG Gurus

newsconquest

Cultivated-meat business Clever Carnivore in funding win

newsconquest