Saudi Savola sees new buys

03 Nov, 2008

Saudi Arabia's Savola Group is reviewing investment priorities, especially new projects, because the global financial turmoil has brought new acquisition opportunities, the firm's top executive said. The company, active mainly in sugar, edible oils and retail, earmarked 18 billion riyals ($4.8 billion) last year to expand in North Africa and Central Asia.
"We are reviewing the priorities amid the current climate," Chief Executive Sami Baroum told Reuters in an interview. "The current conditions are presenting us with opportunities which can never be replaced. The global turmoil has lowered significantly the value of companies which a year ago were too expensive," he added. The Jeddah-based company is looking at acquisitions mainly in its core business. "This is what we are thinking about," Baroum said, declining to elaborate.
Savola, which owns the Azizia Panda chain of supermarkets in the kingdom, has said it will spend about 60 percent of the 18 billion riyals investment on expanding existing activities such as edible oils, sugar refining and supermarket retailing in countries such as Pakistan and Turkey. The Saudi firm, the world's largest producer of branded edible oil, bought Turkey's Yudum for $53 million in 2007 and announced plans in July to buy 80 percent of Pakistani edible oil firm, Agro Processors. Yudum controls about 25 percent of the cooking oil market in Turkey and Agro Processors is Pakistan's third largest maker of the commodity.

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