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Retailspirits industry

Campari Is Buying Grand Marnier in a Quest To Cash in on Classic Cocktails

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Reuters
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Coins2Day Editors
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By
Reuters
Reuters
and
Coins2Day Editors
Coins2Day Editors
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March 15, 2016, 6:39 AM ET
Vienna Fashion Night 2014
Photograph by Alex Domanski—Getty Images

Italy’s Campari, the world’s sixth largest spirits company, said on Tuesday it had agreed to buy Grand Marnier in a deal valuing the French liqueur maker at 684 million euros or some $759 million.

Campari said it would offer to buy shares in Grand Marnier in cash for 8,050 euros each, a 60% premium to the stock value, having agreed to buy shares representing 17.2% of the company from controlling family shareholders.

Campari, best known for its Spritz cocktail containing the orange aperitif Aperol, has grown through a slew of acquisitions since 1995 and it hopes the French brand will help it cash in on a classic cocktail renaissance, especially in the United States.

“(Grand Marnier) perfectly fits Campari‘s acquisition strategy,” the Italian company said in a statement.

Grand Marnier will join Campari‘s portfolio of five higher-margin brands, whose sales rose 10% in the second half of 2015. Campari also owns Skyy vodka, Wild Turkey, Aperol and Cinzano.

The deal gives Campari a 1% share of the market, according to The Financial Times. The industry’s two top distillers, Diageo and Pernod Ricard, meanwhile, control 21% of the market. The worldwide spirits industry is still fragmented compared to beer, even with the string of M&A activity in recent years. The four dominant spirit companies account for 33% of sales, while the top four breweries make up half of the beer industry’s revenue, reports the FT.

Campari said it wanted to delist shares in Grand Marnier from the French stock exchange.

Shares in Campari rose 1% by 0808 GMT while shares in Grand Marnier were suspended from trading.

($1 = 0.9008 euros) (Reporting by Francesca Landini and Valentina Za; editing by David Clarke)

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