A pack of turnaround investors, private equity funds and food groups are vying to snap up Hovis, one of Britain's best-known food brands, in a deal that could be worth well over £100m.
Firms including Endless, Epiris- the buyout firm which recently snapped up restaurant chains Bella Italia and Café Rouge- and Aurelius Equity Opportunities are among roughly half a dozen parties which have lodged indicative offers for Hovis.
The 134-year-old bread producer, which is partly owned by London-listed Premier Foods, was put up for sale three months ago by its controlling shareholder, The Gores Group.
Sources said this weekend that Gores' advisers', RW Baird, had also received indicative offers from at least one European food producer and further private investors.
Premier Foods, which owns Mr Kipling, Bisto and Angel Delight, is likely to use the sale process as an opportunity to sell its 49pc stake in the company, Sky News reported in June.
Around half a dozen potential suitors have reportedly registered their interest in Hovis, the UK bakery business owned by private-equity firm The Gores Group.
— Mom's Kitchen Recipe Network (@MomsKitchenRec2) September 14, 2020
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It wrote off the remaining value of its Hovis stake four years ago.
The auction has been timed to coincide with a turnaround in Hovis's fortunes, which has been accelerated by a boost to sales during the coronavirus pandemic.
Hovis employs more than 2,700 people and is focused on its bakery operations, having sold two flour mills in 2018.
A surge in demand for ambient food brands during the UK lockdown is understood to have benefited all of the major bread producers: Hovis, Kingsmill, which is owned by Associated British Foods, and family-owned Warburton's.
Neither of its principal UK rivals would be likely to be permitted to acquire Hovis for competition reasons.
Food analysts have said they expected Hovis to command a price tag of between £100m and £150m.
Established in 1886, Hovis became one of Britain's best-known food brands, cultivating a home-grown image with its famous 1973 television advert showing a boy pushing his loaf-laden bike up a steep hill.
It was named the UK's most iconic TV commercial in a poll last year.
Like other producers, however, Hovis faces stiff challenges with the category in long-term structural decline as a growing number of consumers switch to bread-free diets.
The company has an estimated 28% market share in branded and pre-packaged bread, with the UK's broader bakery market said to be worth £4bn in annual sales.
Under the deal struck with Premier in 2014, Gores paid £30m for its stake, of which half was deferred and contingent on future performance.
It added that approximately £200m would be invested in Hovis over the next five years to improve its operational infrastructure and reinvigorate the brand.
The deal was motivated in part by Hovis's declining fortunes and Premier's strained balance sheet, which has also prompted it to sell other well-known brands during the last decade.
New CEO for @hovisbakery : Hovis has announced that Nish Kankiwala will be new CEO: https://t.co/nIxW6tYz4n #bakery pic.twitter.com/sURnmKccb2
— British Baker (@BritishBaker) April 19, 2016
Hovis is now run by Nish Kankiwala, a former Pepsico and Burger King executive.
In its results for 2018, the latest period for which figures have been published, Hovis Limited recorded revenue of £460.9m.
The company said that while bread volumes were down 1.5% year-on-year, profit margins had improved and earnings before interest, depreciation, tax and amortisation soared by 80% to £14.6m.
Its most recent results are expected to be published shortly.
Hovis and the bidders declined to comment on the details of the process.
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