BUSINESS

Kraft Heinz calls off $143B mega-deal to buy Unilever

Chris Woodyard
USA TODAY


Only two days after proposing one of history's biggest corporate mergers ever, consumer giant Kraft Heinz on Sunday abruptly called off its pursuit of Unilever.

Kraft makes macaroni and cheese

News that the proposed $143 billion deal, what would have been the third largest of all time, was kaput came in a terse joint statement from the two companies.

It said that Kraft Heinz "had amicably agreed to withdraw its proposal for a combination of the two companies."

Even though Kraft Heinz's offer had been unsolicited and could have set up a fight for control of Unilever, the statement dripped with pleasantries and assurances of mutual respect.

"Unilever and Kraft Heinz hold each other in high regard. Kraft Heinz has the utmost respect for the culture, strategy and leadership of Unilever," it read.

Rather than embracing Kraft Heinz's offer Friday, Unilever didn't take long to reject it based on price alone. Kraft Heinz's offer "fundamentally undervalues" the company, said Unilever at the time.

Plus, it said, it "sees no merit, either financial or strategic, for Unilever's shareholders. Unilever does not see the basis for any further discussions,"

The statement dashed Kraft Heinz's hopes that Unilever would quickly come around to its point of view.

Shares in Unilever fell 6.5% Monday to 41.91 euros in Amsterdam after jumping 14% Friday.

The deal would have united two companies that make dozens of products that millions of people depend on every day, even if the two companies weren't seeing staggering growth.

Kraft Heinz makes Oscar Mayer luncheon meats, Philadelphia spreads and Maxwell House coffee, among other things. Unilever's brands include Dove soap, Lipton tea and Best Foods/Hellman's mayonnaise.

The deal would have been eclipsed only by two past mergers -- Mannesmann-Vodafone and Time Warner-American Online, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.