The upside to the capital markets' disarray is the downside in the production disruption of mergers and acquisitions.
The upside to the capital markets’ disarray is the downslide in the production disruption of mergers and acquisitions. With dealmakers forced to the sidelines, production managers have been able to focus on throughput and line efficiency without the distraction of a rumored buyout that might render their facilities redundant overhead.
Mergers and acquisitions involving food and beverage processors dipped to their lowest level in more than a decade in 2002 (see graph below), and all’s quiet on the M&A front again this year. Through the first six months of 2003, there were 56 deals, according to the Elmwood Park, N.J.-base Food Institute, one more than in 2002’s first half. Last year may be best remembered for the Un-Deal: the sale and likely dismemberment of Hershey Food Corp., the world’s 39th largest food company, seemed certain 11 months ago. The deal unraveled when trustees of Hershey’s charitable trust withdrew their sale offer, and the 125-year-old candy maker was spared.