Associated British Foods (ABF) has confirmed that it will demerge its Primark clothing business from its food arm.
The company said the split will benefit both businesses, providing a clearer investment proposition, greater accountability to shareholders and oversight by boards that have skills directly aligned to each entity.
ABF said the split will be done by a dividend demerger, which is expected to take place by the end of next year. Current ABF shareholders will be given shares in each group 鈥 both of which are expected to remain as FTSE 100 companies, given their size.
The food arm, which will retain the ABF name, has slightly higher sales (拢9.8bn to Primark鈥檚 拢9.5bn) and operates in more countries, but Primark employs more people (83,000 versus ABF鈥檚 53,000).
The Weston family鈥檚 vehicle, Wittington Investments, is backing the demerger and intends to maintain its majority ownership of both businesses, the company said. George Weston will remain as chief executive of ABF and Eoin Tonge will maintain the same role at Primark.
The food business will benefit from a 鈥済reater understanding of the breadth and strength of our differentiated portfolio鈥, while Primark will gain appropriate governance to help grow its brand, Weston said.
ABF鈥檚 shares fell by 4 per cent, but this was due to an accompanying statement in its half-year results that warned that full-year earnings would be lower than expected due to weaker sugar prices.
Charles Allen, a senior industry analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, warned that ABF 鈥渨ill need to rebuild Primark and Food margins鈥 from their current lows for the demerger to prosper.




