logo
UK watchdog starts scrutiny of Greencore's £1.2bn Bakkavor deal

UK watchdog starts scrutiny of Greencore's £1.2bn Bakkavor deal

Irish Times08-07-2025
The UK competition authority has started to scrutinise
Greencore's
planned £1.2 billion (€1.39 billion) purchase of London-based peer Bakkavor.
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said on Tuesday that it is inviting interested parties to file comments with it by July 22nd as part of its so-called phase one inquiry into the transaction.
'CMA is considering whether it is or may be the case that this transaction, if carried into effect, will result in the creation of a relevant merger situation under the merger provisions of the Enterprise Act 2002 and, if so, whether the creation of that situation may be expected to result in a substantial lessening of competition within any market or markets in the United Kingdom for goods or services,' the agency said.
Dublin-based Greencore, led by its Irish chief executive Dalton Philips, secured backing from Bakkavor's board in April for a deal to create a leading convenience food business in the UK with a combined revenue of £4 billion and about 30,500 employees. It would see existing Greencore investors own 56 per cent of the group, with Bakkavor investors holding the remainder.
READ MORE
Some 99.96 per cent of Greencore shareholders that participated in a vote on the matter at an extraordinary general meeting last week backed the accord. Bakkavor investors supported the deal by a majority of 86.1 per cent on Monday.
[
Greencore signs up 69% of Bakkavor shareholders for recommended £1.2bn deal
Opens in new window
]
Greencore knows Bakkavor well. The latter had built up an 11 per cent stake in the Irish business before the 2008 financial crisis, stoking takeover speculation at Greencore – then also 29.9 per cent owned by boomtime Irish property developer Liam Carroll.
At the time, speculation focused on whether Mr Carroll wanted Greencore's defunct sugar plants in Carlow and Mallow for land development purposes.
Bakkavor, founded 40 years ago by Icelandic brothers Agust and Lydur Gudmundsson, sold its Greencore stake at a loss in October 2008 as the Gudmundssons saw their broader business empire come under pressure during the financial crisis.
[
Subscriber Only Business Greencore boss Dalton Philips: 'I love food. I love cooking it, I love buying it, I love eating it. I'm a total foodie'
Opens in new window
]
Bakkavor almost went under during the worst of that period. The Gudmundssons lost control of the business for a period, before managing to regain it a decade ago with the help of a US hedge fund.
The two convenience food groups share the same customers among major UK supermarkets – but have limited crossover in products. Bakkavor would add pizza, bread, desserts and dips to Greencore's range, spanning sandwiches to salads, sushi and ready-made meals.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Irish Times view on the August bank holiday: a weekend to rest easy
The Irish Times view on the August bank holiday: a weekend to rest easy

Irish Times

time34 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

The Irish Times view on the August bank holiday: a weekend to rest easy

In 1924, the leader of the Irish Labour Party, Thomas Johnson, told the Dáil 'a man is easier in his mind when he is getting a holiday if he is getting his pay for the same day'. His remarks came during a debate on the Public Holidays Bill, repealing nineteenth century British legislation which also covered Ireland, relating to four bank holidays: 26th December, Easter Monday, Whit Monday and the first Monday in August. St Patrick's Day had been designated a bank holiday in 1903 by the Westminster parliament. The 1924 Act gave power to the government of the new Irish Free State 'to appoint any particular day to be observed as a bank holiday.' Johnson's plea was that 'workmen who are given a holiday by statute… shall have their day's pay for that holiday.' While that request was not acceded to then, further legislation in 1939 established workers' entitlement to paid leave, with six bank holidays legally established: Christmas Day, St Stephen's Day, St Patrick's Day, Easter Monday, Whit Monday and the first Monday in August. New Year's Day and the October holiday were added in the 1970s, while in 1993 the May holiday was introduced. The most recent public holiday was established in 2022, St Brigid's Day, which also marked the Celtic festival of Imbolc, traditionally acknowledging the commencement of Spring. It was the first Irish public holiday named after a woman. We use the terms bank holiday and public holiday interchangeably, but our laws refer only to public holidays. Collectively, these days arise from inheritance, independent statehood and our distinctive traditions; historically, there were rest and feast days, and celebrations marking seasons, harvests and saints. READ MORE Some may regard the plethora of public holidays, including this weekends August Bank Holiday, as indulgent. But with ten public holidays, Ireland falls below the EU annual average of twelve, and the Irish, working an average 39 hours a week, toil at a higher rate than the EU average of 37.8 hours, allowing workers benefiting from this weekend to be easy in their minds.

‘There has to be ambition from everyone' – Brendan Rodgers sends contract message to Celtic board
‘There has to be ambition from everyone' – Brendan Rodgers sends contract message to Celtic board

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

‘There has to be ambition from everyone' – Brendan Rodgers sends contract message to Celtic board

Brendan Rodgers has delivered a clear message to the Celtic board – show ambition to drive the club forward or he will not extend his contract. Rodgers is entering the final season of his three-year deal and told principal shareholder Dermot Desmond and chief executive Michael Nicholson that he is not interested in performing a maintenance job. The Celtic manager reiterated he would be going nowhere of his own volition before his contract expires but his long-term future remains unclear. Asked about his contract situation ahead of Celtic's Premiership opener against St Mirren on Sunday, Rodgers said: 'Dermot and Michael and I had a conversation over the summer on where we were at. READ MORE 'I said: 'I'm very happy here'. There's conditions we want to be able to improve and be better because I'm not the type of manager that's good at maintaining anything. If it's just something to maintain, I'm not the manager of Celtic. It'll be someone else. 'But to build and grow and develop and push, then of course I love being at Celtic. I'm not the one that's going to sit here and just maintain levels. My commitment here to Celtic is this is a really fast-moving club and you have to keep moving, move quickly. 'It's one of the biggest clubs in world football. It has a demand and an expectation on it and the only way you get better within that is by improving and developing.' Rodgers stressed he was not saying the club had to match his own ambition. 'I don't want to be really arrogant to say that,' he said. 'Celtic clearly has an expectation and should have an expectation because of the size of the club we are, and what the demands are here. 'What I'm saying, for clarity, I love being here. And, yes, there's been some challenges on and off the pitch since I've arrived, but that's management, that's coaching. But in the main, I've absolutely loved it here and I will continue to do so however long that is. But like I said, there has to be that ambition from everyone. 'In terms of my situation, I'm relaxed on it only because I know what I give every single day. And if the club choose to offer (a contract) and see that as the way forward, great. If not, it doesn't really matter to me in relation to what I give to the job. 'My ambition is for Celtic. It's not for me. My ambition is for Celtic to be the best that it can be. 'I've been in the game quite a long time now. So I think I understand what we need to succeed. We did that last year. We brought in certain players that helped our profile when we moved into the Champions League. And those players really helped us in the Champions League. 'So my ambition now is to keep us going in that direction. And that's what our conversations are about.' [ Liverpool see £110m offer for Alexander Isak rejected and refuse to bid again Opens in new window ] Rodgers has stressed the need to bolster their attacking options in recent weeks. Shin Yamada arrived as a belated replacement for Kyogo Furuhashi but the sale of Nicolas Kuhn to Como has compounded a lack of wide players following the long-term knee injury Jota suffered in May. Rodgers said: 'There's no doubt I would have liked to have had players in now, but it's not the case. I'm not going to kill my own joy and overthink. I focus on what's here. We know the work that we need to do and it's my responsibility to convince the club that we really need them. 'Clearly, I'm not doing that job as well as maybe what I can, but I will continue to pursue that because it's something that's really important for us.'

Bohemians football club faces breach of contract lawsuit
Bohemians football club faces breach of contract lawsuit

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Bohemians football club faces breach of contract lawsuit

Leading League of Ireland football club Bohemians faces legal action from a company seeking to recover around €100,000 for alleged breach of contract. Digital ticket services specialist, Future Ticketing Ltd, filed proceedings in the High Court this week against The Bohemian Football Club Company. It is understood that the Tullamore, Co Offaly-based business is seeking to recover around €100,000 that it alleges resulted from a breach of contract by Bohemians. Future Ticketing says it provided services to Bohemians from 2016 through contracts that the two companies renewed several times, including in 2023, when the relationship ended. READ MORE The figure sought by the ticketing company includes fees for its services and a penalty for Bohemians ending the contract, it is understood. Future Ticketing provides technology to sports organisations and other event businesses that allow them to sell tickets directly to customers through their websites and mobile apps rather than going through an agent. The company works with more than 50 professional football clubs, including other well-known SSE Airtricity League of Ireland sides St Patrick's Athletic, Shelbourne FC and Drogheda United. It recently renewed a deal with Northern Ireland Football League club Glentoran FC. The Irish company also numbers Scottish and English clubs among its clients. Future Ticketing also works with racecourses in Ireland and Britain, including leading national hunt tracks, Punchestown and Cheltenham. Dalymount Park, Dublin-based Bohemians is one of the State's best known football clubs. In advance of its Friday fixture against Drogheda United, it was ranked second in the SSE Airtricity League of Ireland Premier Division, with 42 points, seven behind league leaders Shamrock Rovers. In an unrelated case, the Workplace Relations Commission recently awarded former Bohemians player and coach David Henderson the maximum compensation of €26,000 against the club. The commission found that Bohemians had unfairly dismissed him from his €250 a week job as head of recruitment in November 2024. The club maintained that it had to cut spending as it had lost money in 2023 and was likely to do so again last year. Accounts filed by The Bohemian Football Club, which is a company limited by guarantee, show that it had €2.2 million in assets at the end of 2023. The accounts note that it had 'an operating deficit of €245,000″ that year and projected a loss for 2024. It employs around 40 people. Bohemians is not yet due to file accounts for last year. Neither Future Ticketing nor Bohemians had commented by the time of going to press.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store