Takeaway.com lands $10b deal in food delivery race
Merged company will have leadership positions in many of world’s largest markets
PHOTO: FILE
AMSTERDAM/LONDON:
Amsterdam-based Takeaway.com has agreed to buy Just Eat in an 8.2-billion-pound ($10.1-billion) deal to create the world’s largest online food delivery firm outside China in a race to rule the $100-billion market.
A combined Takeaway and Just Eat would rival Uber Eats and would have leadership positions in many of the world’s largest food-delivery markets, including the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands and Canada.
Scale is all-important as food delivery apps scramble to offer consumers the biggest choice. Most players, though not Just Eat, are still loss-making as they spend heavily on marketing and acquisitions.
Just Eat, founded in Denmark in 2000, is principally an online marketplace that connects restaurants and customers, although it has more recently begun offering its own delivery service, like Uber Eats and Amazon-backed Deliveroo.
The agreement with Takeaway, a driver of sector consolidation, represents a victory for US activist investor Cat Rock, which has holdings in both companies and has been pushing Just Eat to merge with a rival.
“The proposed transaction is excellent news for Just Eat shareholders,” Cat Rock Founder and Managing Partner Alex Captain said in a statement. “We support the board’s work in evaluating and consummating a transaction that maximises long-term shareholder value over the coming weeks.”
Based on 2018 order value, the combined company would narrowly overtake Uber Eats, with orders worth $8.1 billion versus its US rival’s $7.9 billion.
Uber Eats declined to comment on the planned deal, which has been agreed in principle.
Under British takeover rules, Takeaway.com has until August 24 to announce a firm intention to make an offer or to announce that it will not make an offer. The deal would then have to be approved by the companies’ boards and shareholders.
Investors in London-listed Just Eat will receive 0.09744 Takeaway.com shares for each share, implying a value of 731 pence per Just Eat share, a 15% premium to their closing price on Friday, the two companies said on Monday.
Shares in Just Eat, which made a pre-tax profit of 102 million pounds in 2018, rose 26% to 800 pence, indicating expectations of a higher competing bid, while Takeaway’s were up 2.6% at 1339 GMT.
“It’s a fair price in that you get a large share of Takeaway.com and you share the benefits as shareholders,” said Philip Webster, fund manager at BMO Global Asset Management, which owns stakes in both Just Eat and Takeaway.
Webster added that the value for Takeaway shareholders potentially could be in splitting up Just Eat. “At 730 pence, if you look at any valuation on Brazil or Canada (...) you get the UK business for a very, very discounted price,” he said.
Takeaway, which bought the German activities of Delivery Hero for 930 million euros this year, says it is the leading food deliverer in continental Europe and Vietnam. It argues that online food ordering will be highly profitable for just one player in each country.
Investec analysts said there was limited geographical overlap between the two, with the exception of Switzerland.
“(This) means the opportunity revolves around leveraging technology spend and administrative costs, in our view, and the sharing of best practice,” Investec said. “This is presumably not insignificant, but less attractive than if they overlapped.”
Analysts do not expect the latest deal to face anti-trust hurdles, although Britain’s competition regulator is considering a full investigation into Amazon’s plan to lead a $575-million fundraising in rival Deliveroo, announced in May.
Just Eat, which originally focused on independent takeaway restaurants that offered pick-up or delivery services, charges a fee to join its platform and earns a commission on each order.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 30th, 2019.
Amsterdam-based Takeaway.com has agreed to buy Just Eat in an 8.2-billion-pound ($10.1-billion) deal to create the world’s largest online food delivery firm outside China in a race to rule the $100-billion market.
A combined Takeaway and Just Eat would rival Uber Eats and would have leadership positions in many of the world’s largest food-delivery markets, including the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands and Canada.
Scale is all-important as food delivery apps scramble to offer consumers the biggest choice. Most players, though not Just Eat, are still loss-making as they spend heavily on marketing and acquisitions.
Just Eat, founded in Denmark in 2000, is principally an online marketplace that connects restaurants and customers, although it has more recently begun offering its own delivery service, like Uber Eats and Amazon-backed Deliveroo.
The agreement with Takeaway, a driver of sector consolidation, represents a victory for US activist investor Cat Rock, which has holdings in both companies and has been pushing Just Eat to merge with a rival.
“The proposed transaction is excellent news for Just Eat shareholders,” Cat Rock Founder and Managing Partner Alex Captain said in a statement. “We support the board’s work in evaluating and consummating a transaction that maximises long-term shareholder value over the coming weeks.”
Based on 2018 order value, the combined company would narrowly overtake Uber Eats, with orders worth $8.1 billion versus its US rival’s $7.9 billion.
Uber Eats declined to comment on the planned deal, which has been agreed in principle.
Under British takeover rules, Takeaway.com has until August 24 to announce a firm intention to make an offer or to announce that it will not make an offer. The deal would then have to be approved by the companies’ boards and shareholders.
Investors in London-listed Just Eat will receive 0.09744 Takeaway.com shares for each share, implying a value of 731 pence per Just Eat share, a 15% premium to their closing price on Friday, the two companies said on Monday.
Shares in Just Eat, which made a pre-tax profit of 102 million pounds in 2018, rose 26% to 800 pence, indicating expectations of a higher competing bid, while Takeaway’s were up 2.6% at 1339 GMT.
“It’s a fair price in that you get a large share of Takeaway.com and you share the benefits as shareholders,” said Philip Webster, fund manager at BMO Global Asset Management, which owns stakes in both Just Eat and Takeaway.
Webster added that the value for Takeaway shareholders potentially could be in splitting up Just Eat. “At 730 pence, if you look at any valuation on Brazil or Canada (...) you get the UK business for a very, very discounted price,” he said.
Takeaway, which bought the German activities of Delivery Hero for 930 million euros this year, says it is the leading food deliverer in continental Europe and Vietnam. It argues that online food ordering will be highly profitable for just one player in each country.
Investec analysts said there was limited geographical overlap between the two, with the exception of Switzerland.
“(This) means the opportunity revolves around leveraging technology spend and administrative costs, in our view, and the sharing of best practice,” Investec said. “This is presumably not insignificant, but less attractive than if they overlapped.”
Analysts do not expect the latest deal to face anti-trust hurdles, although Britain’s competition regulator is considering a full investigation into Amazon’s plan to lead a $575-million fundraising in rival Deliveroo, announced in May.
Just Eat, which originally focused on independent takeaway restaurants that offered pick-up or delivery services, charges a fee to join its platform and earns a commission on each order.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 30th, 2019.