Balaji Wafers in talks to dilute only 10% stake
Firm says it’s not keen on giving away control of the brand, and will set up new factories with the funds raised
investment firms
Actis Capital and Capital International Private Equity Funds have
emerged as the frontrunners to buy the stake. Photo: Pradeep Gaur/Mint
Mumbai/Ahmedabad: Rajkot, Gujarat-based potato chips and snacks maker
Balaji Wafers Pvt. Ltd
has decided to sell a 10% stake, nearly five months after it began talks with strategic investors to sell a majority stake.
Investment firms Actis Capital and Capital International Private Equity Funds have emerged as the frontrunners to buy the stake.
“We are in talks with these two companies and some others as well,” Balaji Wafers managing director Chandubhai Virani
said on the phone. “We are looking at divesting about a 10% stake and
would like to set up new factories with the funds that we raise in the
process.”
In response to an email, J.M. Trivedi, partner and head of South Asia at Actis, said, “We do not comment on market speculation.” An email sent to the media relations team at Capital International
on Friday did not elicit a response by Monday. Virani said the
promoters were not keen on giving away control of the snacks maker. The
exact size of the stake sale could be negotiated, but it would be a
minority holding, he said, adding that the process could take another
four to six months. The company has mandated consulting firm EY for the transaction.
PepsiCo Inc., the world’s largest snack-food maker, is among suitors exploring a bid for Balaji Wafers, Bloomberg
reported in August. “The Virani family plans to sell up to a 49% stake
for as much as $300 million,” the report said, citing a person familiar
with the matter who didn’t want to be named.
Balaji Wafers, with revenue of about Rs.900 crore in the year ended 31 March 2012, plans to increase sales to Rs.1,500 crore by 2015, Keyur Virani, a director of Balaji Wafers, told Mint in July. The valuation of the brand is about Rs.3,500-4,000 crore, he claimed.
Balaji
Wafers was founded in 1976 by Virani and has become one of the
country’s largest makers of potato chips. The regional brand has a
presence in states such as Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan,
Maharashtra and Goa.
Private
equity (PE) and venture capital (VC) firms continue to bet on India’s
consumer goods and services sector despite economic growth having dipped
to its lowest in a decade, slumping to 5% in the year ended 31 March.
PE and
VC investments rose 46% in the first half of fiscal 2014 from a year
ago, with consumer companies in the retail, e-commerce, consumer
packaged goods and quick service restaurants raising $609.39 million in
51 deals. This compares with $416.79 million raised in 57 deals in the
year-ago period, according to investment tracker VCCEdge.
nitesh kumar
pgdm 1st
sources-- livemint.com
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