which owns the French group Darty.
Carphone, Europe's biggest independent mobile phone
retailer, and Best Buy, estimate the size of the European
market for consumer electronics to be around 89 billion pounds
($174 billion).
The pair said the 50-50 owned company would target a
growing appetite for consumer electronics, but analysts said
the pair are entering a tough market where incumbents are
struggling.
"European consumers are facing some of the same pressures
that U.S. consumers are," Carphone Chief Executive Charles
Dunstone said during a conference call. But even so, there were
now opportunities to obtain high-quality retail space.
"The current environment I certainly hope isn't going to
last forever," Dunstone said.
Carphone's 2,400 existing stores will continue to operate
under the Carphone Warehouse and Phone House brands in its nine
European markets, and from 2009 the new company will roll out
larger stores under the Best Buy name.
The deal "provides us with the other giant consumer
electronics marketplace in the world where Best Buy currently
has very little offering," Best Buy Chief Executive Brad
Anderson said.
Anderson added that the tie-up gives Best Buy, which is
facing a soft spending environment at home as the U.S. economy
slows, "a long-term growth horizon that we think is
extraordinary."
Analysts said Best Buy would bring its understanding of the
consumer electronics market to Europe, a region it has long
wanted to enter, but cautioned it could take some time to roll
out the stores and secure a strong presence.
"We would expect substantial investment to build out the
business," U.S.-based Sanford Bernstein analyst Colin
McGranahan said in a research note.
Best Buy sells consumer electronics, home-office products
and entertainment software in the United States, Canada and
China. The new company will open Best Buy stores in Britain and
other European countries but officials of both companies
weren't specific on numbers.
Best Buy said the venture was expected to be funded through
a combination of cash on hand, existing bank lines and other
borrowing. It also said it now did not expect to repurchase
shares under its existing repurchase program in fiscal 2009.
Best Buy said it expected the deal to add around $5 billion
to fiscal 2009 revenue, and boost earnings by five to seven
cents a share in the current year.
The announcement follows months of speculation about a
tie-up between the two companies after Best Buy took a small
stake in the British company last year. The two companies also
operate mobile phone stores in the United States.
Best Buy is the world's largest listed consumer electronics
retailer by market value, according to index data compiled by
Reuters.
Carphone will use proceeds of the sale to pay down debt,
and for investment in its other businesses -- broadband and
fixed-line telecoms. Carphone has already said it will consider
making a bid for Italian broadband operator Tiscali .
Shares in Carphone Warehouse were down 3.4 percent in
London on Thursday after they rose over 6 percent on Wednesday
on bid speculation. Best Buy shares were off 1.9 percent to
$42.62 in noon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
CARPHONE DIVERSIFIES
British-based analysts said broadening Carphone's product
portfolio beyond mobile phones to other electrical goods
arguably reduced risk, although they noted that consumer
electronics was a tough market.
"We believe this is a positive move," Landsbanki analyst
Dan Gardiner said in a note to clients about Carphone. "We saw
the distribution business as facing significant challenges and
the value, once working capital outflow is factored in, at
significantly below this current price.
"Whilst this does not eliminate these problems, and we
believe that the move into consumer electronics is unlikely to
offer the same returns as the existing handset distribution
business, this does effectively reduce the downside valuation
risk," said Gardiner.
The sale is subject to approval by Carphone shareholders.
Bob Willett, the chief executive of Best Buy International,
is expected to be chairman of the new venture, and Carphone
Finance Director Roger Taylor will become chief executive in
addition to retaining his existing duties.
The business will be overseen by a board comprising equal
numbers of Best Buy and Carphone executives.
(Reporting by Kate Holton; Additional reporting by Karen
Jacobs in Atlanta; Editing by Stephen Weeks and Tim Dobbyn)