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Cadbury accepts $19.7bn Kraft offer
The board of UK’s leading confectioner Cadbury Plc today accepted the final takeover offer of US-based Kraft Foods Inc at £11.9 billion ($19.7 billion), ending a six-month resistance and putting on course the creation of the world’s largest confectioner. According to the final offer, Cadbury shareholders will get 840 pence a share, including 500 pence in cash and rest in stock.

Indirect tax mop-up declines 21.6% in Apr-Oct
Stimulus packages and economic slowdown have hit the exchequer hard as indirect tax collections shrunk by 21.6 per cent to Rs 1.27 lakh crore in the first seven months of this fiscal, against Rs 1.62 lakh crore a year ago.

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Two-wheelers, utility segment to prop sales in Q1
Automobile manufacturers are expected to post sequential growth in sales, operating margins and profit in the first quarter of 2009-10, driven by Hero Honda, Maruti Suzuki and Mahindra & Mahindra. But Ashok Leyland and Tata Motors are expected to show poor results in the commercial vehicle segment due to lack of demand. TVS Motors should also be showing a decline in sales on lower motorcycles’ volumes.
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Indian FMCG players again look for buys, in niche segments

Indian fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) players are once again on the prowl to acquire companies, as the economy picks up. - Godrej Sara Lee can advertise product virtues: HC - Emami may join race to acquire UK"s Simple - Nestle to mull acquiring nutri biz of Speciality Foods - Rural India still finds telecom expensive: Report - Prepare for more range-trading - XLRI gets Rs 5 lakh highest offer for global summer intern Deal activity in the recession-proof FMCG sector was a bit subdued this calendar year, as well as last year. The number of reported transactions, according to research company Grant Thornton which tracks mergers and acquisitions, were 10 last year and nine this year, till November. In 2007, however, it was as high as 32. Unlike their counterparts in the international arena who have gone for multi-billion dollar deals (for instance, Kraft’s and Nestle’s reported bid for Cadbury is over $16 billion), Indian FMCG companies appear to be targeting smaller transactions to fill gaps in their product portfolios or get a needed foothold in a new segment or a new market. Consider Emami, reportedly in talks with Godrej Hershey’s for the latter’s beverage brands, Jumpin and XS. If it fructifies, the deal will give the Rs 755-crore skincare and healthcare major an entry into the beverage market, a new segment. Emami, among players such as Marico, Godrej Consumer Products Ltd (GCPL) and Wipro Consumer Care and Lighting, is also eyeing the Simple skincare brand in the UK. If that works out, it will give the company the much-needed foothold it is seeking in the UK market. Other players, too, are seeking growth outside their traditional markets. So, most of them are keenly looking for brands on the block. “Typically, these brands may not be doing too well, or the promoter may be wanting to exit the business altogether,” explains Srividya C G, partner, specialist advisory services, at Grant Thornton. In Simple’s case, the latter appears to be true, with its promoter, private equity player Duke Street Capital, wanting to offload the brand, valued at over Rs 1,900 crore, from its product portfolio. Simple is one of the largest skincare brands in the UK. A meaningful presence overseas is something most FMCG players, especially the homegrown companies, have been eyeing keenly. Which is why offshore M&A is a more active area than onshore M&A, say analysts. “There is a fair bit of seriousness in that space,” says Jaibir Singh Sethi, analyst, consumer & retail, Noble Group. Most homegrown FMCG companies have done some key acquisitions abroad in recent years. GCPL, for instance, wrapped up the acquisition of Keyline Brands in the UK a few years before for Rs 130 crore. Then, it went on to acquire Rapidol and Kinky in South Africa for Rs 50 crore and Rs 152 crore, respectively. Marico, another aggressive acquirer, did a few buyouts in Egypt and Bangladesh. This included HairCode and Fiancee in Egypt, which together cost the company over Rs 100 crore to acquire. The Bangladesh acquisitions included two soap brands, Aromatic and Camellia, which together cost the company approximately Rs 50 crore. “The company,” says Saugata Ghosh, chief executive officer, Marico, “has the Middle East, Africa and South Asian markets on its radar.”


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