A source familiar with the situation told Reuters that FEMSA has spoken with Britain's [image-nocss] SABMiller and Heineken from the Netherlands about a possible sale of its beer operation.
Analysts say SABMiller is in a better financial position than Heineken to bid for the FEMSA Cerveza beer unit of FEMSA, which also has soft-drink bottling and convenience store units.
"We think FEMSA Cerveza is the right fit only for SABMiller," UBS said in a report cited by the news agancy, adding that debt covenants would likely limit any bid by Heineken.
Buying FEMSA's beer unit would throw SABMiller into competition in Mexico against AB InBev, which owns half of Grupo Modelo, Mexico's No. 1 brewer and the maker of Corona. FEMSA and Grupo Modelo account for nearly all of Mexico's beer industry, with sales of almost $5 billion last year.
Amsterdam-based Heineken, the world's third-largest brewer, is still digesting its 2008 acquisition with Carlsberg of U.K.-based Scottish & Newcastle and is seen as less likely to buy FEMSA.
To counter tame sales growth in the United States and Europe, the world's biggest brewers are consolidating to cut costs and increase economies of scale, said the report.
An acquisition in Mexico would be only the latest of several recent big moves in the international beer industry. Reuters said. SABMiller lost its place as the world's leading brewer last year after Belgium's InBev merged with U.S. brewer Anheuser-Busch in a $52 billion deal. Also last year, SABMiller and Molson Coors combined their U.S. operations to create a venture with nearly a 30% share of the U.S. beer market.
Credit Suisse analysts said during a conference call that FEMSA appears to be trying to complete a sale before Grupo Modelo resolves a dispute with AB InBev related to its takeover of Anheuser-Busch last year.
"I think Anheuser-Busch InBev are coming into Mexico and that poses a threat to FEMSA," Credit Suisse analyst Carlos Laboy told Reuters. "ABI can get its hands on Modelo...and increase the profitability of Modelo."
Some analysts warn that Femsa's beer unit is poorly run and say the best way to improve it would be through a sale. SABMiller already has operations in Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.
"We believe in the long run the ability of small entities to compete in beer will be limited," said Barclays analyst David Belaunde. "SABMiller's existing strength and experience in Latin America mean it would be in a position to run the FEMSA Cerveza businesses well."
It was unclear whether FEMSA might sell part or all of its beer operation. Divesting its beer arm would leave it with the Coca-Cola FEMSA soft drink unit and the fast-expanding Oxxo convenience store chain, the report said.
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