Italian cheesemaker Ambrosi bought out by France's Lactalis

Ambrosi had sales of 420 million euros in 2021
calendar icon 26 July 2022
clock icon 2 minute read

French dairy group Lactalis has bought Ambrosi from Switzerland's Emmi and the family that founded the Italian cheese maker, reported Reuters, citing a statement from Emmi on Monday.

The groups did not disclose the purchase price but a source told Reuters that the deal gives Ambrosi an enterprise value of about 300 million euros (USD$307 million) and allows Lactalis to widen its product range and create several production synergies.

Lactalis has expanded in recent years and bought Italian dairy group Parmalat in 2011. The family-owned group counts many household names such as France's brie cheesemaker President and Italy's mozzarella producer Vallelata among its brands.

Ambrosi - which produces parmigiano reggiano and other Italian dairy specialities such as mozzarella, gorgonzola and taleggio cheeses - had sales of 420 million euros in 2021.

It has four plants in Italy and subsidiaries in the UK, United States and France, with around a third of the company's 430 employees working abroad.

Emmi had bought a 25% stake in Ambrosi in 2007 with the aim of pushing its growth abroad, it said in the statement. The rest of the group, which has its headquarters close to the northern city of Brescia, is owned by the Ambrosi family.

Cleary Gottlieb Steen&Hamilton acted as Lactalis' legal advisors. CP Advisors acted as financial advisor for Ambrosi while Pedersoli and Pirola acted as its legal advisors.

Source: Reuters

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