(Bloomberg) — Seven & i Holdings Co. is considering a management buyout to take itself private with funding from banks, Itochu Corp. and the founding Ito family in a transaction that could be worth around ¥9 trillion ($58 billion), people with knowledge of the matter said.
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Any deal could be presented as an option for shareholders in the event that Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc. becomes more aggressive with its pursuit of Seven & i and makes a tender offer, the people said, asking not to be identified because the negotiations haven’t been made public. Seven & i confirmed the family’s non-binding proposal without giving specifics, including a price.
Seven & i shares surged as much as 17%, their biggest intraday gain since Aug. 19, after resuming trading in the afternoon. Itochu shares fell as much as 3.4%.
Under the management buyout being discussed, which would also be the largest-ever in Japan, trading house Itochu, the founding family and existing investors would contribute ¥3 trillion in cash and equity, the people said. Japan’s top megabanks — Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc., Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. and Mizuho Financial Group Inc. — would put up ¥6 trillion in financing, they said.
Such an arrangement would be a remarkable unified response to Couche-Tard’s takeover approach, which is the biggest ever foreign attempt to buy a Japanese target. With the participation of Seven & I’s top competitor in the domestic convenience store business — Itochu — it would reflect the coordinated resistance of corporate Japan to foreign control of one of its most famous companies.
Talks are ongoing and the deal could be difficult given its size, the people said. There’s a chance that the management buyout may not proceed if Couche-Tard rescinds its proposal to buy Seven & i, they said.
Representatives for Sumitomo Mitsui, Mitsubishi and Mizuho declined to comment on any specific transactions. A spokesperson for Itochu declined to comment, saying nothing has been decided.
The operator of 7-Eleven stores hasn’t said anything publicly since Couche-Tard increased its proposed price for Seven & i to $18.19 a share last month to value the Japanese retailer at ¥7.2 trillion. Seven & i had rebuffed an earlier, lower offer by the Canadian operator of Circle K stores and embarked on a restructuring aimed at unlocking value.