General Mills still hungry for Pillsbury Ann Merrill Star Tribune
Published Sep 25 2001
General Mills Inc. Chairman Steve Sanger said his company still intends to acquire Pillsbury Co.
"It's taken us quite a bit longer than we anticipated," as the FTC studied the potential impact of the divestiture of Pillsbury brands, Sanger said at General Mills' annual meeting Monday in Minneapolis.
In an interview after the meeting, Sanger was asked whether the company's board discussed walking away from the deal to acquire Minneapolis-based Pillsbury, which it announced 14 months ago. Sanger's one-word reply: "No."
The delays, although frustrating, have allowed the company to fine-tune its plans for integrating the two companies, which is expected to take about two years, Sanger said.
Golden Valley-based General Mills announced plans to buy Pillsbury for $10.5 billion in July 2000. After months of delays waiting for approval from the Federal Trade Commission, the maker of Cheerios now expects the review to be completed next month.
In February, Minnetonka-based International Multifoods Corp. announced it would spend $305 million to acquire Pillsbury dessert mixes, Hungry Jack potato mixes and General Mills' U.S. Robin Hood flour business.
The Multifoods purchase would alleviate anti-trust issues for General Mills, which competes with Pillsbury with its own Betty Crocker brand.
Yet the plan hasn't been a slam-dunk: Multifoods in late July announced that the FTC review likely will lead to favorable modifications to the original purchase agreement. General Mills is expected to license the Pillsbury brand, including the Doughboy, to Multifoods for use in the dessert and baking mix category.
At the annual meeting, a proposal calling for the company to begin labeling products that contain genetically engineered ingredients was defeated for the second year in a row.
Also again this year, members of the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals conducted modest picketing outside the hall to protest the company's circus sponsorship.
Shareholder questions to Sanger were few. One suggested an American strategy for Afghanistan should center on dropping food, not bombs. Sanger said the company likely would help provide humanitarian aid if called upon.
The General Mills board Monday approved a quarterly dividend of 27½ cents per share, payable Nov. 1 to shareholder of record on Oct. 10. The company's stock, which hit a 52-week high of $46.40 last Tuesday, closed up $1.25 Monday at $44.65.
-- Ann Merrill is at amerrill@startribune.com .
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