East African Breweries Limited (EABL) spent
Sh300 million ($3 million) to acquire an additional four percent stake
in Serengeti Breweries Limited, raising its ownership in the Tanzanian
subsidiary.
The deal, which has been disclosed by
EABL’s parent company Diageo Plc, was completed in July last year
following the approval from Tanzania’s Fair Competition Commission.
EABL’s effective ownership in Serengeti following the latest transaction was not immediately clear.
It has previously hovered between 51 percent and 72.5 percent, depending on a blend of factors.
These
include the treatment of Sh15.3 billion that EABL lent to Serengeti and
the pace at which minority investors in the subsidiary can provide
their share of capital.
“On 29 July, 2019, EABL completed a purchase of four percent of
the share capital of Serengeti Breweries Limited for $3 million (Sh300
million),” Diageo said in its results for the six months ended December.
“This increased Diageo’s effective shareholding (in Serengeti) from 39.2 percent to 40.2 percent.”
Diageo
holds a stake of about 51 percent in EABL and the Nairobi Securities
Exchange-listed firm’s move to raise its ownership in Serengeti has the
impact of also boosting the UK multinational’s interest in the Tanzanian
firm.
Serengeti is a promising subsidiary for EABL,
having accounted for 12 percent of the total sales in the year ended
June 2019. Net sales from this unit rose 20 percent during this period.
Diageo
sees more potential in the East African region where sales grew by 10
percent in the half year to December 2019, driven by strong growth in
spirits and beer. “Beer net sales grew 10 percent led by strong growth
in Serengeti in Tanzania, Senator in Kenya, and the launch of Guinness
Smooth in Kenya,” said Diageo.
Prior to the latest
disclosures, EABL had announced that Serengeti’s minority investors were
to inject an additional capital of Sh3.2 billion into the company.
EABL in June 2018 converted the Sh15.3 billion loan to Serengeti to ease the Tanzanian company’s debt burden.
This saw its stake in the subsidiary rise from the previous 51 percent to 72.5 percent.
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