Sector News

Snack bar company Kind explores stake sale: sources

July 13, 2017
Consumer Packaged Goods

Kind LLC has hired investment banks to advise on a minority stake sale it hopes will value the maker of the eponymous snack bars at more than $3 billion, including debt, according to people familiar with the matter.

The stake sale will test the interest of some of the largest consumer food companies, which are looking to revitalize their sales as consumers turn to novelty and healthier alternatives.

A deal could also give thirteen-year old Kind, which has developed a brand known for its use of ingredients “people can see and pronounce,” its first corporate partner to expand both in the United States and abroad.

New York-based Kind, which has $727 million in annual sales according to Euromonitor, is working with investment banks BDT Capital Partners and Centerview Partners Holdings LLC on the stake sale, the sources said. BDT is also a minority investor in Kind.

The process could attract large food companies such as Kellogg Co, General Mills Inc, Campbell Soup Co PepsiCo Inc and Mars Inc, the sources said.

Kind is not offering the right to buy out the entire company down the line as part of the deal, one of the sources added.

The sources requested anonymity because the process is confidential.

“Kind is solely focused on becoming the foremost health and wellness leader to provide our consumers with delicious and healthy products so they can do the kind thing every day,” a Kind spokesman said, declining to comment specifically on the stake sale process.

BDT declined to comment and Centerview could not be immediately reached for comment.

Kind, founded in 2004 by Daniel Lubetzky, the Mexican-American son of a Holocaust survivor, sells nut bars, breakfast bars, clusters and fruit bites. It was one of the first popular food snacks to eschew artificial flavors and preservatives, a trend that larger food companies are now embracing as they seek to woo back customers.

In the United States, the world’s biggest packaged food market, upstart brands such as Kind could account for 15 percent of a $464 billion sector in a decade’s time compared with 5.0 percent now, according to Bernstein Research.

In search of growth, food companies have turned to acquisitions, such as General Mills’ $820 million deal for organic food maker Annie’s Inc in 2014. Still, minority investments in established brands such as Kind have been less frequent.

Private equity firm VMG group bought a stake in Kind in 2008. It later sold back its share to Lubetzky in 2014 in a stake sale that valued the company at $728.5 million.

By Lauren Hirsch

Source: Reuters

comments closed

Related News

April 26, 2024

Haleon names new Finance Chief and new CHRO

Consumer Packaged Goods

Consumer healthcare firm Haleon has appointed Tate & Lyle executive Dawn Allen as its new chief financial officer, effective 1 November 2024. Allen will succeed Tobias Hestler, who has decided to step down from the role, citing a long-term health condition, the company said.

April 26, 2024

Campari to double Aperol production capacity with €75m investment

Consumer Packaged Goods

The group said that the bottling line, which adds 6,500 square metres to the existing 60,700-square-metre site, is the next necessary stage in the company’s international development. The leading brand in Campari Group’s global sales, demand for the Italian bitter apéritif has grown by 500% in the last decade.

April 26, 2024

Coca-Cola enters $1.1bn strategic partnership with Microsoft

Consumer Packaged Goods

The partnership will see Coca-Cola adopt new technology to foster innovation and productivity globally. Through the deal, Coca-Cola has made a $1.1 billion commitment to the Microsoft Cloud and its generative AI capabilities.

How can we help you?

We're easy to reach