TOKYO — Shares in the Japanese operator of 7-Eleven soared on Monday after the firm confirmed it had received a takeover bid from Canadian retail giant Alimentation Couche-Tard.
The offer for Seven&i Holdings would create an international convenience store behemoth combining 7-Eleven, Couche Tard, Circle K and other brands across Asia, North America and Europe.
With a market value of 5.6 trillion yen ($38.6 billion) as of Monday afternoon, it would also be one of the biggest foreign acquisitions of a Japanese firm.
MERGER This file photo taken on Oct. 4, 2022, shows customers walking out of a 7-Eleven convenience store in Tokyo. Shares in 7-Eleven’s Japanese operator Seven&i Holdings soared on Aug. 19, 2024, after the firm received a takeover bid from Canadian retail giant Alimentation Couche-Tard, which could create a large international convenience store chain that includes Circle K and others. AFP PHOTO
Seven&i operates more than 85,000 stores around the world. Alimentation Couche-Tard (ACT) operates more than 16,700 in 31 countries and territories. Seven&i, in a statement, gave no details on the size of the offer and said it has formed a special committee of independent outside directors to examine it.
“Neither the Board of Directors nor the Special Committee has made any determination at this time to either accept or reject the proposal from ACT, to enter into discussions with ACT or to pursue any alternative transaction,” it said.
The announcement came shortly after the Nikkei business daily broke the news earlier in the day, prompting Seven&i shares to skyrocket 22.71 percent to 2,161 yen.
Before the news became public, Seven&i’s market capitalization stood at around 4.6 trillion yen, the Nikkei newspaper said.
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