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following a rash of m&as, kraft bites into
family nutrition
these days, references to regional domino effects have
come into vogue even in egypts food and beverage
sector, with local manufacturers being bought out by international
players one by one.
in the latest acquisition, us-based kraft foods the second
largest food and beverage corporation in the world after nestlé
bought 100 percent of domestic snack food manufacturer family
nutrition on april 8 for $100.6 million.
krafts wide-ranging portfolio already included its line of
processed cheeses, maxwell house coffee, nabisco cookies and crackers,
oscar meyer meats and post-brand cereals, among other well-known
brand names. prior to the acquisition, krafts business in
egypt was confined mostly to selling the popular tang-brand powdered
juice drink and the triangular-shaped toblerone chocolate bars.
now kraft will sink its teeth into a 30-percent share of egypts
biscuit market and 40 percent of the local cake market.
the barrage of acquisitions by multinationals can be traced back
to february, 2001, when the local chipsy brand, known for its potato
chips, was bought out by tasty foods, a subsidiary of the american
pepsico.
more recently, dutch brewer heineken the worlds fourth
largest beer company took over 98 percent of al ahram beverages
in september 2002. only weeks later, swiss food-product company
hero bought a 65-percent stake in egyptian jam company vitrac.
the food and beverage sector has proven to be the most attractive
sector for foreign direct investment in egypt in the past couple
of years, explained mohamed radwan, head of institutional
sales at delta securities. according to radwan, multinationals are
attracted to egypts low labor costs, inexpensive production
facilities and huge market potential, especially in the food and
refreshment arena. population is a very attractive factor,
and following the currency devaluation, egyptian companies have
become cheaper to multinationals, he added.
for kraft, a subsidiary of american giant altria group (formerly
philip morris group), family nutrition had a lot to offer: a well-established
factory replete with 1,800 workers in 10th of ramadan city and a
widespread distribution network.
known locally as the maker of borio cookies (the local equivalent
of the american favorite and kraft-manufactured
oreo), family nutrition had been a family-owned business under the
local doss group umbrella, which is also the local licensee of avon
cosmetics and beauty products.
the company had done well, reeling in around $40 million in revenues
from its biscuit and cake sales in 2002. it also managed to export
several products in its biscuit line to foreign markets such
as libya, saudi arabia and israel. some of their cookies are even
sold as far afield as the united states, australia and hungary.
kraft, for its part, is fully aware of the potential for further
regional expansion.
the branded biscuit category is growing rapidly in the middle
east, said elizabeth cho, corporate affairs manager at kraft
foods international. we believe there are significant opportunities
for kraft to grow both our biscuit business as well as build important
scale in the middle east, she said.
according to cho, saudi arabia is the companys largest market
in the region. family nutrition fits cozily into the corporations
growth strategy, being number one in the egyptian biscuit market
and number two in snacks and cakes, she said.
still, the recent currency devaluation also means higher costs
for imported raw materials, including packaging. for 50-piastre
snack items, there isnt much room to raise prices. but
the focus is sales growth rather than profit margin until the economic
recession ends, according to radwan.
the string of international companies gnawing at the local food
and beverage market, meanwhile, continues apace, with two tender
offers currently on the table to acquire international foods company,
the local licensee of hostess snack cakes.
still, such massive acquisitions arent always one-way. ownership
of el rashidi el mizan, one of egypts major halawa and tahina
producers, for example, recently returned to egyptian hands.
us-based bestfoods had bought a majority stake in the 113-year-old
family business in april 2000, selling it subsequently to multinational
unilever a few months later. then, in january of this year, the
halawa manufacturer was partially re-acquired by the el rashidi
family, along with the emerging market financial investor cdc capital
partners and the companys senior management, making the deal
egypts first management buy-out, or mbo.
who knows? maybe family nutrition too given the right
circumstances will eventually return to the fold after
its stint in foreign hands.
abdalla f. hassan
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