Group 1 - ACT officially withdrew its nearly $47 billion acquisition proposal for Japan's Seven & i Holdings on July 16, marking the end of a potential deal that could have been the largest merger in 2025 [1] - The negotiation process was described as extremely difficult, with limited due diligence opportunities and a lack of genuine discussions from Seven & i's special committee and major shareholder, the Ito family [3] - Despite ACT's concessions on regulatory coordination and other aspects, they received no sincere response, leading to the decision to terminate the transaction [3] Group 2 - Following the announcement of the acquisition withdrawal, Seven & i's stock price plummeted by 9.16%, the largest single-day drop in three months, while ACT's stock surged by 17% [4] - Seven & i has been facing deteriorating operational performance, with "7-Eleven Japan" reporting Q1 2025 revenue of 223.47 billion yen, a 0.7% year-on-year decline, and operating profit of 54.53 billion yen, down 11.0% [4] - To address its challenges, Seven & i has implemented several reforms, including appointing a new CEO and selling its supermarket business to Bain Capital for 814.7 billion yen, as well as planning to spin off its North American 7-Eleven business by 2026 [4]
470亿美元收购案告吹!加拿大ACT撤回对日本7&i收购,7-Eleven股价暴跌9%
Jin Rong Jie·2025-07-21 23:44