logo
Danone acquires U.S. plant-based organic formula maker Kate Farms

Danone acquires U.S. plant-based organic formula maker Kate Farms

Reuters12-05-2025

NEW YORK, May 12 (Reuters) - Danone (DANO.PA), opens new tab said on Monday it has agreed to buy a majority stake in Kate Farms, a U.S. maker of plant-based organic drinks that will fit into the French food giant's specialized nutrition portfolio.
Santa Barbara, California-based Kate Farms makes formulas and shakes for everyday needs as well as for tube feeding for people with health conditions.
Richard and Michelle Laver founded the company in 2012 after their daughter Kate, who has cerebral palsy, had difficulties with eating. Their products are sold to hospitals and consumers across the country.
'We consider Kate Farms very complementary to our specialized nutrition offerings and capabilities, which we believe will allow us to reach more consumers and patients and bring a high-quality new standard of care to more people with a wider variety of health needs,' Danone Group Deputy CEO Shane Grant said in an interview. 'It's a really important build for us in the U.S.'
The size of the majority stake and financial terms were not disclosed.
Paris-based Danone, which owns yogurt brand Activia, plant-based milk brand Silk and Evian water, signaled its interest in acquisitions after it reported strong 2024 earnings in February.
Kate Farms has previously raised money from investors such as Goldman Sachs Asset Management and Main Street Advisors. In 2022, it raised $75 million in a Series C growth capital round.
Kate Farms' senior management will retain a minority stake in the business, and its CEO, Brett Matthews, will serve as chairman and CEO of Danone's North American Medical Nutrition business.
Danone has been operating in the U.S. since 1942, and now has more than 5,000 U.S. employees and 13 U.S. manufacturing facilities and one research and development hub. It has a market value of about $57 billion.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Budget airline axes all flights to US as airspace restrictions bite
Budget airline axes all flights to US as airspace restrictions bite

The Independent

time10 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Budget airline axes all flights to US as airspace restrictions bite

An Icelandic-based airline has announced it plans to axe all its flights to the US, stopping trips to major cities like Washington D.C. and New York by the autumn. Low-cost airline Play operates flights between Iceland and destinations in the US and Europe, offering budget tickets on Airbus aircraft to and from its main hub, Keflavík International Airport. Play flies in and out of Iceland to European countries such as Denmark, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom. As well as Europe, the airline also directly links Iceland to Baltimore, Boston, and New York City. The airline operates on a hub-and-spoke model, meaning it uses one central airport, Keflavík, to connect to other airports around the world. Play launched its transatlantic flights in the spring of 2022, and has been flying to the US for just over three years. Play's hub-and-spoke routes have since financially underperformed, and an over-saturation in the transatlantic market has meant a growth in competition between airlines. Play will suspend its flights to New York Stewart on 1 September, followed by Boston Logan on 15 September, then finally Baltimore/Washington on 24 October. Its routes in Northern Europe are also expected to be scaled back due to Play dropping the hub-and-spoke strategy it has used since launching four years ago. The strategy has seen a loss of $20 million (£14.7 million) in 2024 in comparison to profits made in point-to-point European leisure markets. The restructuring will come as part of a proposed executive takeover by Play's CEO Einar Örn Ólafsson and Vice Chairman Elías Skúli Skúlason. In a notification to the Central Bank of Iceland, the executives said they plan to submit a voluntary offer for all outstanding shares in the airline via a new holding entity, Aviation Week reported. 'Due to airspace restrictions, several European airlines have redeployed capacity across the Atlantic, leading to overcapacity in the transatlantic market,' the offer document seen by Aviation Week says. 'Many carriers have suspended or terminated East Asia routes, facing a competitive disadvantage against Asian airlines still able to overfly Russia. 'This has increased pressure on transatlantic yields.' If the proposal is approved, Play's revised strategy hopes to target the leisure and VFR (visiting friends and relatives) market. The airline wants to target 'underserved sun destinations' and has recently announced new flights to Antalya, Faro and Agadir. 'We're focusing on the profitable aspects of the business—sun destination flights—and discontinuing those that have not yielded results,' Mr Ólafsson said. The airline will also offer wet-lease services, which provide short-term aircraft and crew to help other airlines fill gaps in schedules.

Trump's secretary clarifies Elon Musk 'body-check' incident
Trump's secretary clarifies Elon Musk 'body-check' incident

Daily Mail​

time39 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump's secretary clarifies Elon Musk 'body-check' incident

Trump's Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent (pictured) faced an unusual line of questioning on Wednesday when he testified on Capitol Hill. During a hearing on his department's budget before the Ways and Means Committee, Bessent was grilled about whether he really tackled Elon Musk in the White House last month. 'Mr. Secretary, how are you doing?' Representative Jimmy Gomez (D-Calif.) (pictured) said innocuously. 'So far, so good,' Bessent quipped back. 'Okay. I was just curious because I know Elon Musk body checked you at the White House. No animosity to Elon Musk, right?' Gomez continued. 'You know that?' Bessent asked about the sparring event. 'That's what I heard,' Gomez responded. Bessent had been partaking in three days of trade negotiations in London and had not yet been questioned about the story. 'So you believe, you believe what you read on Breitbart is what you are telling us, Congressman,' Bessent pressed. 'I didn't know ... If it's too sensitive for you I won't ask that question, but let me move' Gomez flubbed. 'I will take South Carolina over South Africa any day', Bessent replied, referring to his home state versus Musk's nation of birth. Musk was spotted with a black eye as he delivered a sort of farewell address in the Oval Office upon departing from his role as a 'special government employee' heading up Trump's Department of Government Efficiency DOGE). At the time, Musk claimed that the black eye was the result of roughhousing with his young son, X í¿ A-12, who is more commonly know as X. But speculation grew as more was revealed about his tense standoff with Bessent. Former Chief Strategist Steve Bannon told in May that Musk's turbulent time in the White House was marred when he was confronted over wild promises to save the administration 'a trillion dollars'. That's when an irate Musk physically 'shoved' 62-year-old Bessent. 'Scott Bessent called him out and said, "You promised us a trillion dollars (in cuts), and now you're at like $100 billion, and nobody can find anything, what are you doing?"' Bannon revealed. And that's when Elon got physical. It's a sore subject with him. 'It wasn't an argument, it was a physical confrontation. Elon basically shoved him.'

Exports to US slump at record pace in ‘payback' after rush ahead of tariff hikes
Exports to US slump at record pace in ‘payback' after rush ahead of tariff hikes

The Independent

time41 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Exports to US slump at record pace in ‘payback' after rush ahead of tariff hikes

British exports slumped by nearly 9% in April after a record drop in goods exported to the US following President Donald Trump's move to hike tariffs, official figures have shown. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said the value of goods exported to America tumbled by £2 billion in April – the fastest pace since records began in 1997. The drop was led by machinery and transport, including cars, according to separate trade figures from the ONS on Thursday. The value of goods exports to the US are now at their lowest level since February 2022, it added. In total, exports of UK goods in April fell 8.8%, or by £2.7 billion, to £13.7 billion. It follows four months in a row of rising US exports as American importers stocked up ahead of Mr Trump's tariff rises, which came into effect at the start of April. Imports of goods from the US, including precious metals, also fell in April, down by £400 million. ONS director of economic statistics Liz McKeown said: 'After increasing for each of the four preceding months, April saw the largest monthly fall on record in goods exports to the US with decreases seen across most types of goods, following the recent introduction of tariffs.' Exports to the US of machinery and transport equipment, and material manufactures, both tumbled by £800 million in the month, with car exports heavily down. But the ONS said there was also a significant drop in car exports to the European Union in April, with a £900 million decline for machinery and transport. Overall, total goods exports to the EU fared even worse in April, down by £2.1 billion or 12.6%. Mr Trump unleashed so-called reciprocal tariffs on America's largest trading partners at the start of April, including the UK. Britain has since struck a deal that will see UK exports avoid the worst of the trade duties, with a baseline tariff of 10% and exemptions for some key goods, such as steel and aluminium and removing tariffs on UK aluminium and steel exports. But these tariff reductions have not yet come into effect, with aims to finalise the deal by July 9. Experts said last month saw 'payback' for a rush to beat the US tariff hikes earlier in the year. Sandra Horsfield, an economist at Investec, said: 'Distortions around known deadlines were always going to take place and always going to be followed by payback – no matter where, in the end, tariffs landed. 'The bigger question will be how output fares in the coming months, once these temporary effects fade. 'The UK may have secured an agreement to shelter the first 100,000 of cars (roughly the existing level of its car exports to the US) at lower tariffs than other countries face, but this is yet to be signed off by President Trump. 'What will remain is uncertainty over tariffs more widely and importantly the indirect impact this will have on the UK economy,' she added. The ONS figures showed the total goods and services trade deficit widened by £4.9 billion to £11.5 billion in the three months to April, as the rise in imports outweighed the rise in exports. The trade in goods deficit widened by £4.4 billion to £60 billion in the three months to April, while the trade in services surplus is estimated to have narrowed by £500 million to £48.5 billion.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store