Unilever started a strategic review of its operations and boosted its profitability forecast, taking steps to speed up shareholder returns after Kraft Heinz Co.’s failed $143 billion takeover proposal.
“The events of the last week have highlighted the need to capture more quickly the value we see in Unilever,” the Dove soap-maker recently said in a brief statement. The company said that it’s conducting “a comprehensive review of options available to accelerate delivery of value for the benefit of our shareholders”.
While Kraft Heinz dropped its unsolicited approach only two days after it surfaced, the review shows that Unilever chief executive officer Paul Polman isn’t going back to business as usual, but taking steps to boost the company’s value in a bid to fend off other unwanted suitors. Unilever said that it expects core operating-margin improvement for 2017 to be at the upper end of its guidance, for an increase of 40 to 80 basis points.
Among options that Unilever is considering is a sale of the spreads subsidiary that’s previously been earmarked for possible disposal, a split of the business along personal-care and food lines, and/or raising the dividend to appease investors who had hoped for a windfall from a takeover, according to two people familiar with the company’s thinking, who asked to remain anonymous because the review isn’t public.
“[Unilever] is probably alluding to a number of potential things, a more accelerated and aggressive cost-savings plan or spin-out of some assets,” said Martin Deboo, an analyst at Jefferies.
Unilever shares rose 2.9% to 3,690 pence at 1.35 p.m. in London, boosting the company’s market value to £111 billion.
The company said that it expects the review to be completed by early April.
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