Thursday, May 16, 2019
The Acquisition of Snapple by Quaker Oats
In an effort to raise the companions growth come out and avoid a takeover. ally Oats, acquired Snapple beverage corporation for $1,7 million,a price considered by many to be treasured a billion too much. Snapple captured a significant loyal following by being an groundbreaker in the ready-to- tope afternoon tea leaf. The RTD tea segment of the beverage foodstuff was a quick developing area with shining returns ,thats why it attracted giants like coca cola and Pepsico, who entered the market through joint ventures with popular tea brands.Quaker Oats has known success in the past in the beverage market with the widely popular Gatorade drink and panorama it could do the same with Snapple. So in order to repeat the Gatorade success story Quaker officially acquired Snapple on December 6 of 1994. The c. e. o of quaker ,William Smithburg overcome with hubris resulting from his previous success overpaid for the ships caller-up an estimate of a billion dollar premium despite warni ngs from Wall Street. By the time Quacker aquired Snapple the RTD tea industry was maturing and the competition was rising because of the new independent brands that entered the market.Quacker believed that with its financial resources and experience, it could expand the Snapple brand and through the eruditeness establish itself as a leading beverage producer competing with the likes of coca cola and pepsico. Quaker acquired the order by divesting profitable but slow growing pet food and candy businesses. Quaker thought it could create a Snapple/Gatorade combination and planned to exploit the synergies resulting from such combination while improving the capability of operations.They wanted to achieve economies of scale by unifying the manufacturing and distribution of Snapple and Gatorade. What quacker failed to realize is what realy made the success of Snapple. The company ,didnt operate like most beverage producers. Instead of having a company owned workings that handled the m anufacturing,Snapple awarded co-pack contracts to independent manufactures and handled the distribution using independent distributors who were allowed to carry different brands of beverages, but had direct access to the stores, restaurants and vendition machines in their region.Due to distribution,structure problems and unrealistic optimism about the future of Snapple, quacker had a hard time integrating its new grade and had yet to beneficiate from the synergies and economies of scale projected. During the first year as a part of quacker oats ,the Snapple division did not break even and lost an estimated $75 million in1995 sparking the resignation of the president and c. o. o who was in trip of the Snapple unit.The loss in revenue was mainly driven by weaker-than-expected sales and an estimated $40 million dollars to debase back the contracts from the co-packers and other suppliers. During 1996, Snapple slipped to the second place in the ice tea market and despite confirmative projections by quacker. The unit failed to achieve any sales gain and sow it sales decline by 20%, resulting in operating losses exceeding the $120 million for that year. By 1997 snapples market share slipped to the 3rd place behind lipton and nestea.The company was behind even in production methods and processes. On March 28, 1997 Quacker decided to take a $1. 4 billion write-off and sold the company it purchased 29 months before for $300 million. All this led to a loss in performance for Quacker oatas a company resulting in a takeover by Pepsico in December 2000 in a $13. 7 billion all stock bid. The mismatch of big corporate culture with the one of small entrepreneurial firms didnt work and what quacker was trying to avoid by purchasing Snapple happened .
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