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Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc T.ATD

Alternate Symbol(s):  ANCTF

Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc. is engaged in convenience and mobility, operating in about 29 countries and territories, with more than 16,700 stores, of which almost 13,100 offer road transportation fuel. With its Couche-Tard and Circle K banners, the Company is an independent convenience store operator in the United States, and it is engaged in the convenience store industry and road transportation fuel retail in Canada, Scandinavia, the Baltics, as well as in Ireland. It also has a presence in Poland, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China, Belgium, Germany, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands. Its North American network consists of about 17 business units, including 14 in the United States covering 47 states and three in Canada covering all 10 provinces. In Europe, it operates a broad retail network across Scandinavia, Ireland, Poland, and the Baltics through seven business units. Its operating brands include Circle K, Couche-Tard, and Ingo.


TSX:ATD - Post by User

Post by Dibah420on Oct 24, 2024 7:33am
71 Views
Post# 36279789

If you close your eyes it will go away?

If you close your eyes it will go away?
Open this photo in gallery:

A 7-Eleven convenience store in Tokyo, on Aug. 19.KIM KYUNG-HOON/REUTERS

COMMENTS
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Japanese conglomerate Seven & i Holdings laid out a growth plan on Thursday that focused on its core 7-Eleven convenience stores and avoided any mention of a $47-billion takeover bid from Canada’s Alimentation Couche-Tard 

ATD-T -0.84%decrease
 
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Seven & i held an “investor day” to brief analysts and investors on its plan to hive off underperforming businesses and expand overseas as it battles to win over critics and remain independent.

Chief Executive Ryuichi Isaka made no mention of the offer or long-standing shareholder criticism of capital allocation and other aspects of the business, saying the retailer’s restructuring path would provide the “discipline to pursue growth.”

“We’re now at a stage where we can expect to further increase our corporate and shareholder value by seizing growth opportunities in the global market,” Isaka said.

Seven & i expects to roughly double sales to 30 trillion yen ($197-billion) come 2030 by expanding in overseas markets such as Vietnam and Australia, with plans to replicate domestic strengths in fresh food offerings to attract customers and bolster profit margins.

Under the restructuring announced, Seven & i said it would split off its supermarket and some 30 other “non-core” units into a holding company. Market reception so far has been underwhelming, with its share price moving little since the plan was first detailed earlier this month.

Some foreign shareholders have long called for a breakup of the conglomerate, whose other businesses include restaurants and a bank. One investor, U.S. fund Artisan Partners, said the latest restructuring plan was “too little, too late” and urged Seven & i to engage with Couche-Tard.

Thursday’s three-hour briefing and materials made no mention of Couche-Tard’s offer, nor did analysts or shareholders ask about it.

While its Japanese 7-Eleven convenience stores are a money-spinner, Seven & i has been hobbled by poor performance at its supermarkets, including the Ito Yokado stores that make up a part of the holding company formed about two decades ago.

But overseas 7-Eleven stores are less profitable. In Japan, the operating margin is 27 per cent, far above the 3.5 per cent of 7-Eleven stores elsewhere.

00:00 / 00:15

The U.S. business has been hurt by a weak macro environment that weighed on consumer appetite, North America chief Joseph DePinto said at the briefing.

Fuel revenue has been flat while a decline of cigarette sales compared to before the COVID-19 pandemic has had a “significant impact” he said. The group was focusing on fresh food to boost sales, he said.

“Clearly the last year has been difficult, and we’re not happy with the performance,” DePinto said


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