China wants to get control of the most popular fast-food chain in the country.
A consortium backed by sovereign fund China Investment Corp (CIC, 中國投資) has expressed interest in buying a majority stake in Yum Brands Inc’s China business, which runs more than 7,100 KFC and Pizza Hut eateries across the nation, people with knowledge of the matter said.
The investor group, which also includes KKR & Co and Baring Private Equity Asia, is conducting due diligence on the unit, according to the people, who asked not to be identified as the information is private.
Photo: Reuters.
A deal could value Yum China at US$7 billion to US$8 billion, the people said.
Such an investment would provide Louisville, Kentucky-based Yum with cash that could be used to fund a dividend and its planned share buyback, as well as help reduce exposure to a business with shrinking market share, one of the people said.
A majority purchase by the CIC consortium would give a domestic entity control of a leading fast-food chain in the Chinese market for the first time.
“It’s a matter of this being the type of asset that comes up for sale very rarely and the Chinese have been looking all over the world for good buys,” Ben Cavender, a Shanghai-based analyst at China Market Research Group, said yesterday by telephone. “Consumers are the bright spot in China right now.”
The China-backed investor group is interested in buying as much as 100 percent of Yum China, two of the people said.
Yum is considering all options, though it might still decide to pursue the sale of a minority stake or proceed with a previously announced tax-free spinoff of the business, according to the people.
The company is not currently running a formal sale process, one of the people said.
Singapore state fund Temasek Holdings Pte and Chinese investment firm Primavera Capital Ltd (春華資本) are also each vying for stakes in Yum China, the people said.
Beijing-based private equity firm Hopu Investment Management Co (厚樸投資管理), led by dealmaker Fang Fenglei (方風雷), was also considering a potential investment, though deliberations are at an early stage, a person with knowledge of the matter said last month.
A representative for Yum said in an e-mailed statement the company continues to make “good progress” since it announced the separation of its China business, declining to comment further.
CIC’s Beijing-based press office did not immediately reply to an e-mail seeking comment, while representatives for Baring and KKR declined to comment.
“We decline to comment on market speculation,” Temasek said in an e-mailed statement.
Primavera founder Fred Hu (胡祖六) did not answer several calls to his mobile phone seeking comment.
The performance of locally owned chains continues to trail foreign peers like KFC, which opened its first Chinese outlet in Beijing in 1987.
China’s biggest home-grown operator, Hua Lai Shi Catering Management & Service Co (華萊士餐飲), had a 3 percent market share last year compared with Yum’s 24 percent, according to Euromonitor International.
Yum has lately seen its dominance in the world’s second-largest economy wane, as its market share in the country has fallen from 39 percent in 2010, Euromonitor data show.
The company plans to add 600 outlets this year to its more than 7,100 restaurants across China, according to its Web site.
China accounted for about 53 percent of Yum’s revenue last year, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
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