The Just Eat-Takeaway.com Combination Explained
January 10 2020 - 10:18AM
Dow Jones News
By Adria Calatayud
Dutch food-delivery group Takeaway.com NV (TKWY.AE) will join
forces with its U.K. peer Just Eat PLC (JE.LN), after emerging as
the winner of a bidding war with Prosus NV (PRX.AE). The deal
combines two of the largest meal-delivery platforms in Europe at a
time when the industry is moving toward consolidation
worldwide.
Who's who?
Just Eat is a London-based food-delivery company with operations
in 13 countries. Founded in a Danish basement in 2001, it was one
of the pioneer online food-ordering platforms which, like GrubHub
Inc. (GRUB) in the U.S., acts as middleman between restaurants and
customers.
Takeaway.com is an Amsterdam-based food-delivery company which
operates in ten European countries and Israel. It was founded by
Chief Executive Jitse Groen in 2000, when he was a student.
Takeaway.com focuses its operations on a marketplace business
model--linking restaurants to diners--but also has its own
delivery-logistics unit, Scoober.
Prosus is a Dutch technology investor which last year was spun
out of South Africa's Naspers Ltd. (NPN.JO). Naspers, which owns a
near-third stake in Chinese internet giant Tencent Holdings Ltd.
(0700.HK), still holds a majority interest in Prosus. Online food
delivery is one of Prosus's key areas of investment. The company
holds stakes in Germany's Delivery Hero AG (DHER.FF), India's
Swiggy and Brazil's iFood--also backed by Just Eat.
Why Just Eat?
Just Eat is the leading food-delivery platform in the U.K. and
most of the markets where it operates but has been losing market
share to startups with deep-pocketed backers like London-based
Deliveroo, Uber Technologies Inc.'s (UBER) meal-delivery arm Uber
Eats and Spain's Glovo. Shares in the company, which listed on the
London Stock Exchange in 2014, peaked in February 2018, but took a
hit after Just Eat launched its own delivery services to fend off
competitors. Peter Plumb stepped down as chief executive in January
2019 following an activist campaign by U.S. investor Cat Rock
Capital Management LP, and Just Eat has been without a permanent
CEO since then.
How is the deal structured?
Takeaway.com's all-share offer will give Just Eat shareholders a
57.5% stake of the combined group while Takeaway.com investors will
hold the remaining 42.5%. Just Eat shareholders will be entitled to
receive 0.12111 new Takeaway.com shares for each Just Eat share
held. This valued Just Eat at around 6.25 billion pounds ($8.17
billion), or 916 pence a share, based on the closing share price of
the Dutch company on Dec. 18, the last day before its final bid was
made.
What took so long?
Takeaway.com and Just Eat first said they were in talks to
combine their businesses in late July. A merger agreement was
reached a few days later. Under that agreement, Just Eat
shareholders would have owned 52.12% interest in the combined group
and the U.K. company was at 731 pence a share. However, Just Eat
investors Aberdeen Standard Investments and Eminence Capital LP
publicly criticized the deal's terms, arguing that the U.K. company
deserved a higher price.
Prosus made an all-cash offer in late October, gatecrashing Just
Eat's planned merger with Takeaway.com, but its 710 pence a share
bid was promptly rejected by the U.K. company's board. Prosus and
Takeaway.com then entered into a war of words, exchanging
accusations over the other party's efforts to take over Just
Eat.
Delivery Hero--which counts Prosus as its largest
shareholder--in September started selling shares in Takeaway.com,
which hurt the Dutch company's share price and lowered the value of
its offer for Just Eat. Cat Rock--an investor in both Takeaway.com
and Just Eat--accused Delivery Hero of undermining the sale process
of the U.K. company. Delivery Hero said it categorically refuted
all allegations. Takeaway.com asked the Berlin-based company to
refrain from voting on the Just Eat deal, citing a potential
conflict of interest.
Although Prosus increased its offer to 740 pence a share on Dec.
9, Just Eat's board stuck to its recommendation of the combination
with Takeaway.com. Both suitors put in their final, sweetened
offers for Just Eat on Dec. 19--Takeaway.com gave Just Eat
shareholders a larger slice of the merged group and Prosus raised
its cash bid to 800 pence a share.
What's next?
Just Eat and Takeaway.com said their combination will create the
largest food-delivery platform outside of China, with No. 1
positions in 15 out of the 23 countries where it is present. The
companies said that combined they had 360 million orders in 2018
worth about 7.3 billion euros ($8.11 billion). The chief executive
will be Takeaway.com's CEO Mr. Groen and it will be chaired by Just
Eat Chairman Mike Evans.
Takeaway.com pledged to explore options to exit Just Eat's
investment in iFood after completion of the deal. If Just Eat's 33%
stake is sold, half of the net proceeds would be returned to
shareholders of the combined group and the other half would be
retained as the business invests to strengthen its competitive
position. Analysts at Barclays said Prosus is the most likely buyer
for Just Eat's stake, given it already has a large holding in the
Brazilian company.
Write to Adria Calatayud at adria.calatayud@dowjones.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 10, 2020 10:03 ET (15:03 GMT)
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