Chinese conglomerate Sanpower Group (三胞集團) has agreed to buy a majority stake in British department store House of Fraser in a deal worth £480 million (US$800 million), according to a joint statement.
Sanpower, a Nanjing-based conglomerate listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, is to acquire an 89 percent stake in the 165-year-old British brand through its Nanjing Cenbest (南京新百) subsidiary.
Sanpower founder and chairman Yuan Yafei (袁亞非) said the deal was the largest overseas acquisition in the retail sector by a Chinese business, and a “landmark transaction.”
He expressed his intention to expand House of Fraser overseas, particularly in China.
The group currently has 60 stores across Britain and Ireland and one in Abu Dhabi.
“House of Fraser is a strong and iconic heritage brand in the UK and abroad, with exceptional fashion credentials,” the 49-year-old Chinese businessman said.
“The management team has done an incredible job moving this business from a traditional department store to a recognized premium branded fashion retailer with a first-class multichannel offering.” he said. “We have always been looking to invest in strong brands like House of Fraser, and take them to the next level of growth.”
The British company’s executive chairman Don McCarthy said the takeover opened an “extremely exciting chapter.”
He added that the sale would end plans to list House of Fraser on the London Stock Exchange.
“The acquisition by Nanjing Cenbest will allow House of Fraser’s management team to continue to grow and invest in the business in the UK and Ireland, provide a strong platform from which to expand the brand in international markets and to further develop our multichannel, stores and premium fashion offering,” McCarthy said.
The company said it did not expect changes for the 7,300 company and 12,000 concession staff in its stores.
SEMICONDUCTORS: The German laser and plasma generator company will expand its local services as its specialized offerings support Taiwan’s semiconductor industries Trumpf SE + Co KG, a global leader in supplying laser technology and plasma generators used in chip production, is expanding its investments in Taiwan in an effort to deeply integrate into the global semiconductor supply chain in the pursuit of growth. The company, headquartered in Ditzingen, Germany, has invested significantly in a newly inaugurated regional technical center for plasma generators in Taoyuan, its latest expansion in Taiwan after being engaged in various industries for more than 25 years. The center, the first of its kind Trumpf built outside Germany, aims to serve customers from Taiwan, Japan, Southeast Asia and South Korea,
Gasoline and diesel prices at domestic fuel stations are to fall NT$0.2 per liter this week, down for a second consecutive week, CPC Corp, Taiwan (台灣中油) and Formosa Petrochemical Corp (台塑石化) announced yesterday. Effective today, gasoline prices at CPC and Formosa stations are to drop to NT$26.4, NT$27.9 and NT$29.9 per liter for 92, 95 and 98-octane unleaded gasoline respectively, the companies said in separate statements. The price of premium diesel is to fall to NT$24.8 per liter at CPC stations and NT$24.6 at Formosa pumps, they said. The price adjustments came even as international crude oil prices rose last week, as traders
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), which supplies advanced chips to Nvidia Corp and Apple Inc, yesterday reported NT$1.046 trillion (US$33.1 billion) in revenue for last quarter, driven by constantly strong demand for artificial intelligence (AI) chips, falling in the upper end of its forecast. Based on TSMC’s financial guidance, revenue would expand about 22 percent sequentially to the range from US$32.2 billion to US$33.4 billion during the final quarter of 2024, it told investors in October last year. Last year in total, revenue jumped 31.61 percent to NT$3.81 trillion, compared with NT$2.89 trillion generated in the year before, according to
PRECEDENTED TIMES: In news that surely does not shock, AI and tech exports drove a banner for exports last year as Taiwan’s economic growth experienced a flood tide Taiwan’s exports delivered a blockbuster finish to last year with last month’s shipments rising at the second-highest pace on record as demand for artificial intelligence (AI) hardware and advanced computing remained strong, the Ministry of Finance said yesterday. Exports surged 43.4 percent from a year earlier to US$62.48 billion last month, extending growth to 26 consecutive months. Imports climbed 14.9 percent to US$43.04 billion, the second-highest monthly level historically, resulting in a trade surplus of US$19.43 billion — more than double that of the year before. Department of Statistics Director-General Beatrice Tsai (蔡美娜) described the performance as “surprisingly outstanding,” forecasting export growth