Sunday, April 29, 2012

Pfizer Expected to Sell Baby-Food Line to Nestlé



Pfizer Inc. is expected to announce on Monday it has reached a deal to sell its baby food business to Nestlé SA for more than $10 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.
The Swiss food giant beat rival Groupe Danone SA BN.FR -3.55% for the Pfizer unit after a months-long auction. Pfizer said in July it would divest the infant-nutrition business as well as an animal-health unit, seeking to focus on its core drugs business.
Nestlé is the leading seller of milk formula for babies, with a 17% share of the $27 billion world-wide market in 2010, followed by Mead Johnson with 15% and Danone with 13%, according to the most recent data from Euromonitor International, a market-research firm. For Nestlé, the purchase of Pfizer's infant formula business is a way to build its presence in China, one of the largest markets for such products, a person familiar with the matter said.
China is one of the few major markets where Nestlé doesn't have a leading share. In 2010, Nestlé had the eighth-largest share, with 2.3% of China's $7.5 billion baby formula market, according to Euromonitor International. By contrast, Pfizer had a 7.4% share, No. 5 in China. Together, the companies would be No. 3 in the market, behind Mead Johnson with a 11.7% share and Danone with a 9.8% share.
To win approval from antitrust regulators, Nestlé would likely have to divest assets in certain markets where it has a dominant position, according to the people familiar with the matter. The magnitude of any such sales is unclear, and would depend on regulatory authorities in countries where it has a big market share. Nestlé would be prepared to sell assets if necessary, one of the people said.
Pfizer's nutrition unit is among the company's most rapidly expanding businesses, with sales rising 15% last year to $2.1 billion. Yet the unit is also among Pfizer's smallest—the company had $67.4 billion in 2011 revenue—and it lies outside the drug maker's core business selling prescription medicines.
The company, the world's largest drug maker by sales, has been shedding businesses outside its core medicine franchise in part to boost its shares. Last August, it sold its Capsugel unit, which makes drugs in capsule form, to private-equity firm KKR KKR -1.40% & Co. for $2.4 billion. Some investors have clamored for the sale of even more units, such as its over-the-counter business that sells Advil cold-and-pain medicine and other consumer-health products.