London Markets: Tate & Lyle surges on sweetener unit deal talks

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Tate & Lyle shares rose as much as 7% on Monday after the food and ingredients maker said it was in talks to sell most of its primary products division.

The announcement from Tate & Lyle
TATE,
+6.10%

came after the Sunday Telegraph reported it has held talks on auctioning the artificial sweetener making unit off for £1.2 billion ($1.66 billion), possibly to a private-equity firm.

Analysts were excited about the prospect of Tate & Lyle’s food and beverage solutions unit trading as a separate entity. Analysts at Barclays Capital said even at 18 times enterprise value/earnings before interest and tax, the unit still would trade at a discount to Kerry
KRZ,
-0.64%
,
DSM
DSM,
+0.07%

and Symrise
SY1,
-0.50%
.

In the six months to Sept. 30, the food and beverage solutions arm recorded an adjusted operating profit of £98 million on revenue of £475 million, and the primary products unit recorded an adjusted operating profit of £83 million on revenue of £842 million.

A clean exit might not be possible, and Tate & Lyle implicitly acknowledged this by saying it is in talks to sell a “controlling” stake. Analysts at Jefferies point out that two major U.S. plants for Tate & Lyle make products both for the primary products as well as food and beverage solutions division. Another issue, the analysts noted, is that Tate & Lyle currently benefits from the ability to offset U.K. tax losses against U.S. profits, a benefit it wouldn’t enjoy as much in a joint venture scenario.

The FTSE 100
UKX,
+0.34%

meandered on Monday, ahead of a big week for earnings including the latest results from electric vehicle maker Tesla
TSLA,
+0.76%

after the close of trade on Wall Street. In early afternoon trade, the FTSE 100
UKX,
+0.34%

rose 0.3%, just 1% below its April 19 high.

Also on the move, U.K. engineering group IMI
IMI,
+11.17%

rallied 11% after lifting its earnings guidance by 7% and launching a £200 million stock buyback program.