Bureau won’t challenge takeover of Canada Malting parent

U.K. also has 'no further questions'

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Published: August 17, 2023

Canada Malting’s processing plant in Montreal. (CanadaMalting.com)

The owner of one of Canada’s major commercial maltsters says its takeover by a major French peer won’t be challenged by Canada’s antitrust regulator.

United Malt Group, whose Canadian assets operate under the Canada Malting banner, last month locked in on a previously announced deal to sell itself to France’s Malteries Soufflet for A$1.5 billion (C$1.3 billion).

Sydney, Australia-based United Malt and Soufflet reported Aug. 7 they now have written confirmation from Canada’s Commissioner of Competition that the office “does not intend to make an application” to challenge the transaction.

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Thus, United Malt said, the condition for Canadian regulatory approval “will be satisfied” if the commissioner’s notice isn’t reversed by Aug. 23.

United Malt reported separately Monday that it and Soufflet now also have confirmation from the United Kingdom’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) that the CMA has “no further questions in respect of the proposed transaction.”

Much like the “no-action letter” Canadian regulators provide in such cases, “no further questions” is the CMA’s standard response when the authority doesn’t intent to mount a public inquiry into the deal, United Malt said.

The world’s fourth largest commercial maltster, United Malt makes bulk malt for brewers, craft brewers, distillers and food companies and has 12 processing plants in Canada, the U.S., Australia and the U.K., with combined malting capacity of about 1.26 million tonnes. It had been owned by Australia’s GrainCorp since 2009 and was spun off in 2020.

United Malt’s Calgary-based Canada Malting unit, which alone produces about 400,000 tonnes of malt per year, includes malting plants at Calgary, Montreal and Thunder Bay, nine country elevators in the Prairie provinces, and Country Malt facilities at Delta, B.C., Brampton and Calgary.

Soufflet, which has 28 malt houses in Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America with combined production capacity of 2.36 million tonnes per year, has been an arm of French agribusiness InVivo since last year. InVivo has previously said it plans to be the world’s top malt firm within five years. — Glacier FarmMedia Network

About the author

Dave Bedard

Dave Bedard

Editor, Grainews

Farm-raised in northeastern Saskatchewan. B.A. Journalism 1991. Local newspaper reporter in Saskatchewan turned editor and farm writer in Winnipeg. (Life story edited by author for time and space.)

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