Tata Group’s talks over $1 billion Bisleri stake stall

Stocks
Workers offload water bottles from a pickup truck outside a Starbucks Coffee

Workers offload water bottles from a pickup truck outside a Starbucks Coffee “A Tata Alliance” store, operated by Tata Starbucks Ltd., in the Brigade Road area of Bangalore, India on Sunday, May 3, 2015. India’s Finance Minister Arun Jaitley is striving for a goods and services levy to subsume a range of federal and state taxes, a step that would make India more of a single market for commerce. Photograph: Sanjit Das/Bloomberg

Tata Group’s talks for a majority stake in Bisleri International Pvt, one of India’s largest bottled water makers, have stalled over valuation, according to people familiar with the matter.

The Indian conglomerate had been in advanced discussions to take control of Bisleri and the parties were working on finalizing the structure of a transaction, the people said. Bisleri’s owners were looking to raise about $ 1 billion from a deal, the people said. Negotiations later hit a snag as the companies were unable to agree on a valuation, said the people, who asked not to be identified as the information is private.

Discussions between Tata and Bisleri could still resume, and other potential suitors may emerge, the people said. Representatives for Tata and Bisleri declined to comment.

Bisleri traces its roots to 1949 when Shri Jayantilal Chauhan founded soft drinks maker Parle Group, which acquired Bisleri from an Italian entrepreneur in 1969, according to its website. It said it has a 60% share in India’s bottled mineral water market. The company also manufactures hand sanitizer. Bisleri was in talks to sell a stake to Tata, Bisleri Chairman Ramesh Chauhan said in a local television interview in November.

For Tata Group, acquiring Bisleri could have expanded its portfolio of bottled water brands in India. One of the conglomerate’s listed units, Tata Consumer Products Ltd. owns the Himalayan Natural Mineral Water and Tata Water Plus brands.