Dollar General Corp. offered about $9 billion for Family Dollar Stores Inc., excluding debt, setting off a bidding war for a company that had agreed to a $8.5 billion takeover by Dollar Tree Inc. last month.
Dollar General plans to pay $78.50 a share in cash, compared with Dollar Tree's bid of $74.50 a share in cash and stock, according to a Monday statement. The deal will generate $550 million to $600 million in cost savings annually three years after its completion, Dollar General said. Including debt, the purchase is worth $9.7 billion.
Dollar General, based in Goodlettsville, Tenn., is fighting to keep its perch at the top of the dollar-store industry. A merger between its two rivals would have created a new market leader, escalating competition at a time when Wal-Mart Stores Inc. also is looming with new smaller-format stores.
"Dollar General didn't need to do this, because they could have grown nicely without Family Dollar," said Patrick McKeever, managing director with MKM Partners in Stamford, Conn. But the combination of Family Dollar and Dollar Tree "would represent a marginal long-term threat to market share."
The Dollar General chain is more similar to Family Dollar's, meaning it may be able to extract bigger benefits from a takeover than Dollar Tree, according to Poonam Goyal, a senior retail analyst for Bloomberg Intelligence. The company's $600 million in annual cost savings from the merger is twice what Dollar Tree estimated in its deal to buy Family Dollar.
Supplier pressure
The pursuit of cost savings could put pressure on the combined chain's suppliers. If Dollar General and Family Dollar merge, one vendor — Orchids Paper Products Co., which sells toilet paper and napkins — will rely on the company for almost 60 percent of revenue, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Other suppliers include Clorox Co., Dean Foods Co. and Procter & Gamble Co.
While Dollar Tree caters to middle-class consumers and sells most items for $1, the other two dollar chains both focus on low-income shoppers and offer more food at various price points. If combined, Dollar General and Family Dollar would have about $28 billion in annual revenue.
"Dollar General can more easily justify a higher price because of the greater potential operating synergies," said Erik Gordon, a professor at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business. Still, Dollar Tree may have incentive to come back with a counteroffer, he said. "The acquisition would do more to transform Dollar Tree's business."