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Investing.com -- Keurig Dr Pepper (NASDAQ:KDP) is set to buy Dutch coffee company JDE Peet’s (AS:JDEP) in a €15.7 billion cash deal, the companies announced on Monday, marking one of the biggest shakeups in the global coffee industry in recent years.
The offer, at €31.85 a share, represents a 20% premium to JDEP’s last close and a 33% premium to its 90-day average, though only 1% above the stock’s initial public offering (IPO) price in 2020.
Upon completion, expected in the first half of 2026, the U.S. beverage group will split into two listed entities: Global Coffee Co., with about $16 billion in sales, and Beverage Co., with around $11 billion.
The deal is also seen as raising competitive pressure on Nestle (SIX:NESN) in the U.S. market, though Barclays analysts believe global dynamics outside America are unlikely to change significantly.
The analysts said the move will “create a larger pure play coffee company combining JDEP’s Peets brand in the U.S. with Keurig, the largest single serve coffee business in the U.S., as well as a Beverage RemainCo, with both businesses to be listed in the U.S.”
The deal unwinds the 2018 merger of Keurig Green Mountain and Dr Pepper Snapple , which had long raised questions over the logic of combining coffee with carbonated soft drinks.
KDP forecasts $400 million in cost synergies over three years, with earnings accretion in the first year. JAB and JDEP management, holding 69% of voting shares, have already committed to tendering.
“Pure play companies tend to work best in Fast-Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) so we do see compelling industrial logic in this move today,” Barclays analysts noted.
For shareholders, the offer delivers a significant short-term premium but mixed longer-term optics.
Barclays observed that “JDEP was IPO’ed at €31.50, so shareholders who have owned JDEP since the IPO would only be up 1% on their investment at the offer price of €31.85. They might consider the offer price to be opportunistic and on the low side.”