BRUSSELS, Belgium, Nov. 18, 2008

Checkmate For King Of Beers

InBev SA Completes $52B Takeover Of Anheuser-Busch To Become World's Largest Brewer

  • This Bud's for you InBev SA. The Belgian and Brazilian brewer purchased the iconic U.S. beer brand for $52 billion (euro41 billion). Photo

    This Bud's for you InBev SA. The Belgian and Brazilian brewer purchased the iconic U.S. beer brand for $52 billion (euro41 billion).  (AP)

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(AP)  InBev SA formed the world's largest brewer Tuesday when it finalized its $52 billion (euro41 billion) takeover of Anheuser-Busch Cos. Inc..

The new company, named Anheuser-Busch InBev, will be headed by InBev CEO Carlos Brito and will be headquartered at Leuven, Belgium.

InBev promises to keep Anheuser-Busch's St. Louis base as the company's North American headquarters but the takeover ends 150 years of family rule at Anheuser-Busch. Anheuser-Busch President and CEO August A. Busch IV joins the new company's board as a non-executive director.

Anheuser-Busch shares stopped trading Monday and will now be swapped for $70 each in cash.

The Belgian-Brazilian takeover of Anheuser-Busch comes after a bitter takeover battle turned sweeter with a higher offer in July, despite protests in St. Louis that saw politicians criticize the deal and Web sites call for Bud to be saved from 'the waffle guys.'

Anheuser-Busch provides half of America's beer but it has not managed to expand around the world as fast as InBev - a Belgian-Brazilian hybrid that owns hundreds of local brands but few real stars.

Anheuser-Busch owns several properties in Virginia in the Williamsburg area. In addition to a brewery in Williamsburg, the company's subsidiaries own the Busch Gardens theme park, the Kingsmill Resort and Spa, and the Water Country USA water park.

InBev has promised to keep all 12 North American breweries open as long as the company faces no new U.S. taxes. Anheuser-Busch already plans to shed 1,185 positions - mostly by offering early retirement and not filling vacancies.

The company did not mention a dispute with Mexico's largest brewer Grupo Modelo - which was 50-percent owned by Anheuser-Busch. Grupo Modelo filed a notice of arbitration against Anheuser-Busch last month, saying the takeover violated their investment agreement and its right of consent to enter into a partnership with InBev.

Taking over Anheuser-Busch gives InBev a jewel of a brand in Budweiser - the world's top selling beer - which it promises to sell more widely by pushing into emerging economies in Asia, Latin America and eastern Europe. It will sell a fifth of all beer in both Russia and China.

This will help generate growth as beer sales decline in North America and Europe where drinkers are cutting back and turning to wine and other drinks.

The new company leapfrogs SABMiller as top brewer and becomes one of the world's top five consumer goods companies.

Brito said the combination had created "a stronger, more competitive global company with a leading international brand portfolio and distribution network, and great potential for growth all over the world."

InBev said it now had all the regulatory clearances it needed for the deal.

China approved the takeover on Tuesday but barred the company from increasing existing stakes in Chinese brewers. It said it was necessary to prevent Anheuser-Busch InBev becoming a monopoly in the country.

This curbs future growth in the world's most populous nation. It caps Anheuser-Busch's 27-percent stake in Tsingtao Beer Ltd. and InBev's 28.5 percent holding in Zhujiang Beer Ltd. They will also be prohibited from linking up with two leading Chinese breweries, Huarun Snow Beer Ltd. and Beijing Yanjing Beer Ltd.

The U.S. Department of Justice cleared the deal last week after InBev agreed to sell Labatt USA, which sells the Canadian beer in the U.S. It will hold on to Labatt in Canada. InBev did not say who would buy the American unit.

U.S. antitrust officials had worried that beer prices would increase in upstate New York because - with Budweiser and Labatt Blue - the two companies would supply most of the beer in the region.

InBev has borrowed $45 billion to pay for the deal and secured $9.8 billion in equity bridge financing that it had planned to replace with a share issue in October.

But rocky financial markets forced it to postpone issuing new shares and it says it can keep the bridge financing in place for up to six months after it closes the deal and issue shares early next year.

InBev says the company is well positioned to cope with a slowing global economy because costs for key ingredients such as grain malt for brewing beer and aluminum for beer cans will fall even as sales stall.

InBev is renowned for shaving costs since it was formed in a 2004 merger between Belgium's Interbrew and Brazil-based AmBev.

Beer industry analyst Plato Logic says beer sales will slow significantly to expand just 3 percent next year as economies around the world shrink or stagnate.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Add a Comment
by hober_mallow November 18, 2008 2:41 PM PST
So does InBevSA own the Czech Budweiser as well?
Reply to this comment
by NMlost November 18, 2008 3:10 PM PST
So, who gets the Clydes?
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti November 18, 2008 4:16 PM PST
This is what happens when you let the current fascists privatize, offshore jobs, start taxpayer funded wars for oil and run the country on Chinese, Japanese and European credit.

Better get used to the American government fire sale. Next they will sell our National Parks and monuments.
Reply to this comment
by mytoosense November 18, 2008 4:44 PM PST
I''ve switched to PBR when in the mood for American made barley pops.
Reply to this comment
by tmittelstaed November 18, 2008 4:48 PM PST
How are Budweiser Beer and making love in a canoe the same?

Too *** i n g close to water!!!

Budweiser is a disgusting excuse for beer, always has been.
Reply to this comment
by magoo2u1 November 18, 2008 5:47 PM PST
I doubt the consumers of Bud will notice any real difference. If there is a flaw in the plan it''s the expectation that BEER drinkers around the world will want to drink Budweiser. I rarely do because I like to drink beer that has a taste, some folks call it flavor. Toss an Ale or a dark beer in front of an American beer drinker and watch his face go blank.
Reply to this comment
by NMlost November 18, 2008 6:42 PM PST
*snicker* Personally, I like a brew I can taste-Guinness.
Reply to this comment
by muttlover2 November 18, 2008 7:47 PM PST
Bud''s a good beer for young drinkers. The can looks good. Still, if you want a bland beer with some alcohol in it, Hamms or Milwaukee''s Best will cost a lot less.
Reply to this comment
by incog-nito November 18, 2008 8:30 PM PST
Ah, there''s nothing Americans like better than a good old-fashioned Belgian brew like Budweiser.
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