 
  Performance  Food Group (PFG) on Monday said it acquired fellow distributor Reinhart  Foodservice in a $2 billion deal that promises to make PFG one of the  largest national distributors in the United States.
  The  deal combines the country’s third- and fifth-largest foodservice  distributors. PFG is No. 3 behind Sysco and US Foods, according to data  from Restaurant Business sister company Technomic.
  Reinhart  is No. 5, and the second-largest privately-held distributor in the  country. The distributor generates more than $6 billion in net sales,  which would give Richmond, Va.-based PFG about $30 billion in net sales,  the company said.
  “The  addition of Reinhart and its complementary strengths will expand  Performance Foodservice’s broadline presence, improve our network  efficiency and help us achieve our long-term goals,” PFG CEO George Holm  said in a conference call Monday discussing the deal, according to a  transcript from the financial services site Sentieo.
  He  said the deal “provides us with greater overall scale, a diverse but  similar customer base, including a solid base of independent customers  with little overlap.”
  Reinhart was  established in 1972 and has been owned by Reyes Holdings since 2005, a  period in which the distributor grew to $6 billion in sales from $1.6  billion. Holm said that PFG and Reyes have been talking about a  transaction “for many years now.”
  “Now is the right time for both parties,” Holm said. 
  Reinhart  has 26 distribution centers and 42,500 customers and employs 5,600  people. Its biggest chain customers include Burger King, Subway, and  Five Guys. Holm said that PFG also does business with Burger King and  Subway in some markets.
  The deal is  subject to regulatory approvals. PFG said it expects to see about $50  million in “cost synergies” by the third year following completion of  the merger. Most of those will come in operations, procurement and  logistics.
  The agreement also promises  to solidify PFG’s status as a major, national distributor and would put  it within arm’s reach of US Foods, the second-largest distributor in the  U.S., according to the Technomic Power 50 report.
  “This really closes the gap between them and the current No. 2 US Foods,” said David Henkes, senior principal with Technomic.
  At  least some of the reasoning behind the deal centers on independent  restaurants. Distributors have focused more attention on this group,  which is growing and potentially more lucrative. Reinhart is no  exception, but Holm believes that PFG will be able to help the  distributor more effectively tap into this group of customers. 
  “They  appropriately have spent a good bit of time redoing their warehouse  network, reworking their customer base and positioning themselves for  better independent growth,” Holm said. “But it is still a company that  continued through that period of time to show, although very  modest, independent growth. And we feel that we’ve got some sales  processes that can help with that independent growth.”
  Holm  said the company doesn’t add a “significant amount of geography” with  the acquisition, though it has no plans to reduce the number of  distribution centers “at this point.” But he said the deal gets PFG  “closer to the customer” with better delivery service.
  “You’re  not running your fleet as many miles,” he said. “Probably not running  your salespeople as many miles either. We’ve always found those to be  good things in the business.”
  Henkes  said PFG has made numerous strategic acquisitions recently, including  one in which it acquired c-store distributor Eby Brown.
  But  deals between the largest distributors are rare and, Henkes said, will  be increasingly so as the biggest players grow larger.
  “This  type of acquisition, one that involves two of the top 10 distributors  in the industry, is going to be more rare as these distributors become  huge national players that are competing coast to coast.”
  UPDATE: This story has been updated to include deal analysis.
  restaurantbusinessonline.com |