
Siparex, Carvest invest in Groupe Sipas
Siparex and Carvest have invested in French charcuterie business Groupe Sipas as part of a capital restructure.
The investment by Siparex and Carvest comes as Sipas has agreed to acquire charcuterie producer Claviere. The group's capital has been restructured, with Sipas CEO Richard Paget securing a majority stake in the business. The two investors are believed to have deployed a joint €5.3m in Sipas.
The company's founding family will retain a stake in Sipas. BECM coordinated a debt package to finance the transaction, which also involved Crédit Agricole and BNP Paribas.
Company
Based in Avoudrey, Groupe Sipas produces charcuterie, with a specific focus on Morteau and Montbéliard sausages. The acquisition of Claviere will see Sipas sell its products to supermarkets under three brands: Jean-Louis Amiotte; Morteau Saucisse; and Claviere.
Sipas generated €42m in turnover in 2014, while Claviere reported sales of €19m.
People
Pierre Bordeaux-Montrieux and Nathanael Martin worked on the deal for Siparex. Carvest was represented by Denis Mervaille and Paul Lambert.
Advisers
Equity – Cabinet Ratheaux, Gaétan de la Bourdonnaye, Jean Joyet (Legal); Advance Capital, Olivier Poncin, Corentin Thévenon (Financial due diligence).
Company – Clairfield International, Jean-Noël Combasson, Fabien Lebon (Corporate finance); Cabinet Quadratur, Gilles Fresel, Harry Bouganim (Legal).
Latest News
Stonehage Fleming raises USD 130m for largest fund to date, eyes 2024 programme
Multi-family office has seen strong appetite, with investor base growing since 2016 to more than 90 family offices, Meiping Yap told Unquote
Permira to take Ergomed private for GBP 703m
Sponsor deploys Permira VIII to ride new wave of take-privates; Blackstone commits GBP 200m in financing for UK-based CRO
Partners Group to release IMs for Civica sale in mid-September
Sponsor acquired the public software group in July 2017 via the same-year vintage Partners Group Global Value 2017
Change of mind: Sponsors take to de-listing their own assets
EQT and Cinven seen as bellweather for funds to reassess options for listed assets trading underwater