Nestle to buy Canadian nutrition firm Atrium

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: December 5, 2017

Nestle’s logo on a bar of Milky Bar chocolate in Manchester, Britain, April 25, 2017. (Photo: Reuters/Phil Noble)

London | Reuters — Nestle is buying Canadian vitamin and nutritional supplement maker Atrium Innovations for US$2.3 billion, expanding its presence in consumer healthcare as it seeks to offset weakness in packaged foods.

The world’s largest packaged food company said on Tuesday it will buy the maker of vitamins, probiotics and meal replacements from a group of investors led by Permira Funds.

About 80 per cent of Atrium’s sales come from the U.S., meaning there is still room to buy businesses elsewhere, such as the vitamins unit being sold by Germany’s Merck, which has a large presence in emerging markets and is also being looked at by Nestle.

Read Also

Barry Senft is stepping down as chief executive officer of Seeds Canada after four years. Photo: John Greig

Senft to step down as CEO of Seeds Canada

Barry Senft, the founding CEO of the five-year-old Seeds Canada organization is stepping down as of January 2026.

“We continue to look for opportunities in things that make sense in very disciplined fashion,” said Greg Behar, head of Nestle Health Science, the division that will house Atrium Innovations.

Nestle Health Science already sells nutritional products for people with specific medical conditions and has been at the forefront of Nestle’s ambition to become a “nutrition, health and wellness” company as packaged food sales slow, amid changing tastes.

Nestle, the maker of Gerber baby food, Purina pet food and Nescafe coffee came under pressure this year to improve returns from activist shareholder Third Point. It has since announced a share buyback, a margin target and three other small acquisitions.

The purchase of Atrium, which will have US$700 million in sales this year, will add to earnings immediately, Behar said. The deal reflects comments made earlier this year by Nestle’s new CEO, Mark Schneider, who identified consumer health as a strategic priority.

“They’ve been trying to articulate a message around Nestle Health Science and health and wellness for some time,” Liberum analyst Robert Waldschmidt said. “In terms of nutrition, this makes sense.”

Montreal-based Atrium has seven factories in the U.S., Canada, Europe and Argentina. Its brands in North America include Garden of Life, Genestra, Pure Encapsulations and Klean Athlete supplements and Trophic and Douglas Laboratories vitamins and supplements.

This is Nestle’s fourth purchase in recent months. It announced deals for Sweet Earth vegetarian foods and Blue Bottle coffee in September and Chameleon Cold-Brew coffee in November.

The purchase of Atrium is expected to close in the first quarter of 2018.

— Martinne Geller reports on the consumer goods sector for Reuters from London.

explore

Stories from our other publications