3 PressArticles VivendiLagardere
3 PressArticles VivendiLagardere
3 PressArticles VivendiLagardere
BY NICOLAS MADELAINE
WC 728 words
PD 15 February 2021
BY NICOLAS MADELAINE
WC 671 words
PD 26 February 2021
Facing heavy losses, Lagardère limits the damage thanks to the edition
If 2019 was a “travel retail” year for Lagardère, 2020 is undeniably a “publishing year”. The Hachette Livre branch is helping the group save
the damage while the health crisis and the paralysis of the economy - and of all forms of tourism - are heavily affecting its trading activity in
transport locations. While the group's turnover fell by 38%, to 4.4 billion euros, and the group went into bright red - a net loss of 660 million
euros, against 15 million in 2019 -, the “travel retail” activity fell by 60%, to 1.7 billion euros in revenue, while Lagardère Publishing
stabilized its revenues at 2.4 billion.
The turnover of the News division (Europe 1, "Paris-Match", "JDD", etc.) is down 14%, in particular due to the fall in turnover from licenses
(- 27%). The drop in radio turnover is 9% and that of the press 12% thanks to a better second half. The operating losses of these “other
activities” are 47 million.
At the end of the second half, however, the picture was less bleak than on June 30, the group having “burned” 500 million euros in cash
during the first six months of the year. Lagardère managed to generate 63 million in operating profits over the second half of the year,
"marking a strong improvement of 281 million euros compared to the first half", affirms the group, which highlights "both cost reduction
efforts undertaken at the start of the health crisis and the profitability of Lagardère Publishing”. Thanks to positive cash flow generation in
the second half, net debt fell by 315 million compared to June 30, to 1.7 billion.
The deterioration of this indicator was revealed last year when Vivendi increased its capital, which has since joined forces with the Amber
fund and wants to change the governance of Lagardère at the next meeting. Lagardère now believes that “its liquidity is sufficient to cover
its needs and deadlines”. It has set up a loan of 465 million guaranteed up to 80% by the State (PGE).
For the year 2021, Lagardère estimates that “the environment remains uncertain in a context of gradual easing of the Covid-19
pandemic”. As a result, he “continues his efforts to control costs across the entire group”.
In publishing, “the favorable mix effect in 2020, driven by sales of digital media, should fade and thus slightly affect profitability in 2021”. In
the trade of places in stations and airports, Lagardère notes that "the forecasts of the various organizations, including Iata, are at February
3, 2021 between + 13% and + 50% growth in world air passenger traffic in 2021". But the group will continue to save money.
Finally, the group does not mention a resumption of the dividend, suspended at the height of last year's confinement. No decision has also
been taken on the governance and scope of the group, said Thursday evening, Arnaud Lagardère, who also set the condition that relations
between shareholders be "peaceful".
BY NICOLAS MADELAINE
WC 655 words
PD 29 April 2021
The last step to be taken is to obtain the green light from the Financial Markets Authority (AMF) to proceed with this normalization of the
group's structures without having to launch a takeover bid. "There is and will not be [...] a shareholders' agreement or any common policy
vis-à-vis the company and none of them will control it after the transformation", says the press release. Vivendi is the leading shareholder,
followed by Amber (20%), the fund that has been campaigning for this change of governance since 2017, Qatar (13%), Financière Agache
(which controls LVMH) at 7% and Arnaud Lagardère who will double his stake.
The disputes between Amber and the Lagardère group have been dropped. According to our information, the accusation of insider trading
against Amber filed by Lagardère in the fall of 2018 has been dismissed. According to a source familiar with the matter, the return on
investment for Amber on Lagardère is positive.
BY LES ECHOS
WC 715 words
PD 22 June 2021
BY NICOLAS MADELAINE
WC 751 words
PD 1 July 2021
WC 533 words
PD 16 September 2021
BY NICOLAS RICHAUD
WC 954 words
PD 16 September 2021
Editis and Hachette: a mega merger in sight which will have to overcome the obstacle of antitrust
Eighteen years later, the idea of a marriage between Editis and Hachette resurfaced. But unlike 2003 when the publishing industry did not
see Lagardère's takeover of Vivendi Universal Publishing (VUP), the ancestor of Editis, coming, the merger in sight did not surprise anyone
this time. “It was inevitable,” confides an editor. On Wednesday, Vivendi announced that it would launch a takeover bid for Lagardère. A
stock market movement that will have ramifications, particularly in the publishing industry.
The former owns Editis (Julliard, Plon, Le Cherche Midi, etc.), number two on the French book market, while the latter owns Hachette
(Grasset, Stock, Fayard, Calmann-Lévy, etc.), the sector leader in France and an international heavyweight. The publishing branch
(Lagardere Publishing or Hachette Livre) is considered the jewel of the Lagardère group, of which it represents 54% of turnover, at 1.1
billion euros in the first half. This entity generates only 28% of its income in France compared to 50% in the United States, Canada and
England.
Almost exclusively French, Editis saw its revenues reach 372 million euros between January and the end of June. In all, the two groups
generated nearly $3.5 billion in revenue in 2020, according to BoFA Securities. A level that approached the future consolidated whole of
the world leader in the sector, Penguin Random House (4.1 billion) before the acquisition of Simon & Schuster.
Obviously, all eyes are now on the side of the competition authorities. "Unlike the first merger in 2003, when Brussels took up the case, the
subject of competition arises mainly in France this time", notes an expert in the sector, while the combined turnover of the two players, in
France, revolves around half of the revenues of the publishing sector.
This time again, important "remedies" will be essential. Antitrust authorities generally authorize takeovers between rivals when the
combined market share does not exceed 25 to 30%, but balk when the new group weighs more than half of a market. Editis being Franco-
French, the acquisition of Hachette's international assets should not raise any problems but, in France, the acquirer will have to proceed
with asset disposals.
“I don't see how this merger can pass as it stands. There are two very critical points. On the one hand, the distribution distribution
where Editis, via Interforum, and Hachette Distribution weigh more than 50% of the French market, since they distribute their houses and
many third-party publishers, underlines a connoisseur of the industry. They will surely have to return contracts and this is an opportunity for
a group like Media-Participations. The other file will be that of the school book, where Editis and Hachette are also ultra-dominant”.
On the side of the financial markets, analysts have started to pull out their calculators. "Based on similar transactions (Penguin / Random
House), we believe that nearly 40 million euros of annual synergies can be achieved", estimates BoFA Securities. It also remains to be
seen how the merger will take place, against the backdrop of the question of the integration of the teams. “There is a Hachette spirit as
there was a Canal+ spirit. When we see what happened there, we are afraid of losing that, ”advances the SUD union of Hachette. The
Editis -Hachette saga has only just (re)begun.
BY NICOLAS MADELAINE
WC 985 words
PD 16 September 2021
WC 764 words
PD 16 September 2021
WC 509 words
PD 18 September 2021
Vivendi, which is controlled by French billionaire Vincent Bollore, said late Wednesday it has agreed to buy the 18% stake in Lagardere
built up by activist investor Amber Capital. Provided the deal gets approval from antitrust authorities, Vivendi will make a takeover offer for
the rest of the company. Lagardere's Paris-listed stock jumped 19% Thursday.
Amber first bought shares in Lagardere in 2016 and fought a long battle to get rid of the company's “societé en commandite” structure, a
French corporate setup that allowed Chief Executive Arnaud Lagardere to control the firm with a tiny economic interest. Since taking over
his father's business in 2003, Mr. Lagardere delivered annual shareholder returns of 4%, just half what France's CAC 40 index clocked
over the period.
The family scion's attempts to protect himself from Amber's attack have been dramatic. He initially brought in Mr. Bollore as a white knight -
- Vivendi bought a stake in Lagardere last spring and helped defeat the hedge fund's push for a board overhaul last year. But as Mr.
Lagardere didn't fully trust his ally, who has been eyeing Lagardere's media assets, he asked another billionaire, Bernard Arnault -- the
founder of luxury-goods giant LVMH and his father's old tennis partner -- to step in and buy a stake higher up the corporate structure. This
initially protected Lagardere from a takeover by Mr. Bollore, but also sent him into the arms of Amber.
Vivendi's own investors also get a clearer picture of what the business might look
like after it spins out its trophy asset, Universal Music Group, next week. The
French company says it can revamp unloved publishing assets in the same way it
did the Los Angeles-based music giant. Vivendi is floating the business at a 33
billion euro valuation, equivalent to $38.83 billion, after several years of strong
growth.
Any comparisons between Universal Music and Lagardere, which owns book
publisher Hachette and several magazine brands, need to be taken with a pinch of
salt. The music company's revival owes as much to Spotify and streaming
technology as Vivendi's management. The results of turnaround efforts at other
Vivendi businesses, such as pay-TV provider Canal Plus, have been more mixed.
Still, the company may be able to attract a fresh set of value investors if it can
convince them that it can give Lagardere's cheap assets a makeover. As this
apparent final twist in the Lagardere drama has again demonstrated, it often
doesn't pay to bet against Mr. Bollore.
BY NICOLAS RICHAUD
WC 680 words
PD 18 February 2022
Lagardère reduces its losses thanks to the edition and the record year of Hachette
In 2021, the publishing leader in France and number three worldwide generated nearly 2.6 billion euros in revenue, a historically high level.
An exceptional year for Hachette, which is about to officially change ownership. Last year, the publishing leader in France and world
number three generated revenues amounting to nearly 2.6 billion euros. That is an increase of 9.4% over one year and a historically high
level for the subsidiary of the Lagardère group. In France, where its activities have taken off by 13.8%, the group has crossed the symbolic
barrier of one billion euros in turnover. A great first.
“Last year, France drove our growth, whereas in 2020, it was the English and American markets that carried us,” emphasizes Fabrice
Bakhouche, Deputy CEO of Hachette Livre. Our performance in 2021 is all the more satisfying as we did not release a mega 'bestseller'
that sold millions of copies. It is built on our catalog of authors that we have developed and installed over time. “For the current year,
Lagardère anticipates a “less buoyant context for book sales in 2022” and forecasts a turnover “at a stable level” at the publishing level.
A landing that will not prevent Hachette from being active in the field of takeovers after those of Paperblanks (stationery) and Workman
(publishing) in recent months. “We are in a market with large volume effects and the idea for us is to continue to grow in publishing to
reach a more critical size in the United States and the United Kingdom, notes Pierre Leroy, CEO of Hatchet Book. We also want to
complete our editorial specialties in niche markets such as board games which are complementary to our main activity. »
In the meantime, these results for the 2021 edition are a welcome breath of fresh air which has enabled the Lagardère group to limit its
losses, while Vivendi - controlled by Vincent Bolloré - is preparing to launch a takeover bid on the company, whose it already owns more
than 45% of the capital. In 2021, the firm still managed by Arnaud Lagardère recorded a net loss of 101 million, against 660 million the
previous year, mainly due to the loss of turnover in "travel retail" (trade in airports and train stations). “We were caught up by the Covid
which put one of our two legs a little on the ground”, underlined, Thursday, Arnaud Lagardère, during his hearing by the Senate within the
framework of the preparation of a law on media concentration.
Last year, Lagardère's "travel retail" activity rebounded by 33.1% compared to 2020, to 2.3 billion euros. But this represents barely a little
more than half of the income generated by this activity in 2019. As for the group's other activities, including in particular the media (“Paris
Match”, Europe 1, “Le JDD”…), the income rose by 5.7% over one year, to 242 million, compared to 229 million in 2020 and 288 million in
2019.
In all, the group's overall turnover reached 5.13 billion in 2021. An increase of 15.5% over one year, but this level remains 26.5% lower
than before the health crisis. During a conference with analysts, Arnaud Lagardère, who has made it known in the past that he was not
hostile to Vivendi's takeover bid, specified that his plan was to increase his stake in the group: "I would ideally like, if possible because it
depends on the markets, to acquire something like 3 or 4% to reach 15% in the near future.”
WC 718 words
PD 18 February 2022
BY NICOLAS MADELAINE
WC 832 words
PD 27 May 2022
BY NICOLAS RICHAUD
WC 760 words
PD 29 July 2022