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Metro To Expect At Least 8 Second-Round Bids For China Unit: Sources

By Dayeeta Das
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Metro To Expect At Least 8 Second-Round Bids For China Unit: Sources

At least eight suitors are preparing second-round bids to buy a majority stake in German wholesaler Metro AG's Chinese operations, Reuters learned from people directly involved in the matter, as suitors vie for heft in a changing offline landscape.

A deal could see Metro's China business valued at $1.5 billion (€1.3 billion) to $2 billion (€1.8 billion), Reuters previously reported.

Interest in Metro comes as a maturing e-commerce market and big-data capabilities transform China's traditional wholesale and retail sectors, with technology majors such as Alibaba Group Holding Ltd aggressively expanding offline.

Business-Focused Strategies

Teaming up with such a wholesaler could also bring synergy to the business-focused strategies that some e-commerce firms are pursuing, said some of the people. Moreover, Metro's supply chain overseas is attractive as it offers premium imported products that its rivals do not have access to, they said.

Metro has asked a shortlist of bidders to submit non-binding offers by 10 June, said two of the people, who all declined to be identified as the information is confidential. The whole process is likely to conclude in September, the two added.

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Bidders include the consortia of private equity firm Boyu Capital with property developer China Vanke Co Ltd, Hopu Investments with fresh food delivery firm Meicai, and Hillhouse Capital Group with supermarket chain operator Yonghui Superstores Co Ltd, the people said.

Two people said gaming and social media giant Tencent Holdings Ltd is considering joining the race with Yonghui, of which it is a minority shareholder.

Alibaba is also working on a bid with Taiwan's RT-Mart International Ltd, a portfolio firm, one of the people said US retailer Walmart Inc, which runs 400 hypermarkets in China, is also on the list, three of the people said.

Potential Bidders

Other bidders include Chinese electronics retailer Suning Holdings Group, supermarket operator Wumart Stores Inc and private equity firm Primavera Capital Group, the people said.

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Boyu Capital, Vanke and Alibaba declined to comment. Walmart could not provide comment outside regular US business hours. Reuters could not reach Meicai or Wumart for comment. The other bidders did not respond to emailed requests for comment.

Metro told Reuters it aimed for a strategic partnership to maximise the growth potential of its Chinese business. It said it is speaking with potential partners and will narrow its list of suitors for further talks. It declined to provide further details such as time frame or the identity of suitors.

The German wholesaler opened its first China store in Shanghai in 1996. It now employs 11,000 people across the country, and had sales of €2.7 billion ($3.02 billion) in the financial year ended September 2018, its website showed.

Property makes up the bulk of the value of Metro's China business, people with direct knowledge of the matter previously told Reuters.

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Once a sprawling retail conglomerate, Metro has been restructuring in recent years to focus on its core cash-and-carry business, selling Kaufhof department stores and then splitting from consumer electronics group Ceconomy AG.

News by Reuters, edited by ESM. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: European Supermarket Magazine.

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