In LIVEKINDLY, Wally and Debbie found such a partner. Based in the US, LIVEKINDLY is a global collective of plant-based heritage and start-up brands. It has established strategic partnerships with seed growers, producers and distributors who have invested in infrastructure to transform traditional meat production facilities into ones that can process plant-based products.
Crucially, it was a potential buyer which shared many of the same ethical concerns of Fry’s themselves.
“The mission and the vision for LIVEKINDLY Collective is to make plant-based living the new norm,” says Kees Kruythoff, Chairman and CEO of the LIVEKINDLY collective. “We strongly believe that the current food system is totally broken, and that we need to change from an animal-based food system to a plant-based food system.”
By partnering with LIVEKINDLY, Fry’s would be able to secure a trustworthy custodian of their business and values.
Ensuring the right strategic fit
Having helped generate global interest in the company that connected with Fry’s sense of purpose, EY teams worked to execute the deal.
EY teams brought a wide range of M&A advisory capabilities to the table, leveraging its global network of transactions specialists, and constructing a transaction that enabled a fruitful partnership between Fry’s and LIVEKINDLY.
“This was a chance for us to really bring the power of the EY M&A reach to the table with this deal, “says Clifford Sacks, EY Global M&A leader.
“We had a strong delivery leadership team of seasoned M&A practitioners with more than 40 years of M&A experience between them,” says Agrawal. “This enabled EY teams to lead the entire global cross border transaction process, modelling, structuring of the transaction, and negotiation of the key terms leading to a successful transaction.”
And there was considerable enthusiasm for the deal both within EY teams, and within the wider buyer’s market. “I don't think we're ever going to have a deal again with such universal interest as Fry's had. There was buying interest in every direction, from every continent, from other family-owned businesses, corporates, large multinational brands and leading private equity funds, to start-ups,” says Sacks.
Leveraging the deal-making capabilities and international reach of EY teams, Fry’s began to concentrate on what LIVEKINDLY could offer. According to Sacks, EY helped Fry’s finalize the deal in two distinct ways.
“Firstly, the range of potential buyers allowed Fry’s to select the perfect cultural fit. Wally wanted to be sure that he had a buyer that could help carry this beautiful thing he had created and put it on consumer shelves around the world,” says Sacks.
“And secondly, an appropriate commercial outcome. By bringing this huge universe of buyers together, we were able to achieve the right level of price tension to give them a satisfactory commercial outcome.”