After more than 90 years, the popular Australian Vegemite brand is coming home.
Bega Cheese will be the new owner of the spread following its deal to buy most of Mondelez International’s grocery brands in Australia and New Zealand for A$460 million ($345 million).
The deal returns the salty, slightly bitter spread to full local ownership for the first time since 1926. Developed by a young Australian chemist from brewer’s yeast, Vegemite has a huge following of customers who have grown up with it and was famously referenced in the Men at Work song “Land Down Under”.
“The wonderful heritage and values that Vegemite represents and its importance to Australian culture makes its combination with Bega Cheese truly exciting,” said Bega Cheese Executive Chairman Barry Irvin.
He described the deal, which includes other brands like Kraft peanut butter and Mac & Cheese, as “company making”.
While the British favorite Marmite has a presence in the yeast-based spreads market in Australia, it is Vegemite that dominates it, with over 300,000 jars produced each day. It is found in 90 percent of Australian homes.
Vegemite’s homecoming was applauded by Australians on social media too amid a climate of renewed vigor for Australian assets to be in local hands.
In 2016, the government blocked Chinese led-groups from buying cattle and pastoral group S. Kidman & Co, owner of the country’s largest private landholding. It was eventually sold to a consortium led by Australia’s richest woman, Gina Rinehart.
Dick Smith, the owner of OzEmite, which is marketed heavily as a homegrown alternative to Vegemite, told Reuters he was “delighted” Vegemite was back in Australian hands.
“I can’t wait for Arnott’s to be bought back and Aeroplane Jelly and Redheads Matches,” he said of other foreign-owned Australian favorites.
“Hopefully this is the start of buying back the farm so the wealth stays here for our children and grandchildren.”
Bega said it would fund the deal initially with debt and it would be “strongly” accretive to earnings per share. Shares in the company rose more than 13 percent after news of the deal.
Mondelez, a spin-off from Kraft Foods, said the sale would allow it to further focus on brands like Cadbury Dairy Milk, Oreo Biscuits and Philadelphia cream cheese.
Bega Cheese could not comment immediately on whether it would look at opportunities to extend the reach of the Vegemite brand. In 2009, Kraft launched a creamier take on Vegemite, iSnack 2.0, but it was quickly removed from shelves after being widely derided by Australians.
($1 = 1.3316 Australian dollars)
By Jamie Freed
Source: Reuters
A new wave of brands is emerging that promotes indulgence and rejects the notion of sacrifice. Low-maintenance “hangover” beauty products are designed to address the effects of late nights and partying without judgment or hassle, and even include cosmetics that are formulated in a way that means you can fall asleep in your makeup without feeling guilty.
The pilot will allow the company to scale circular packaging in about 18 markets over the next three years, an approach that jumps on the success of similar efforts in the company’s Indonesia ecoSPIRITS program, which launched in 2022 and is active in 38 bars.
Unilever’s focus on purpose across its brands has been a source of criticism from some of its investors. Its new CEO Hein Schumacher says the company now recognises there are some brands where the concept is simply not relevant.