Private firms to buy Petco

  • By Elliot Spagat / Associated Press
  • Friday, July 14, 2006 9:00pm
  • Business

SAN DIEGO – Petco Animal Supplies Inc., the nation’s second-biggest pet supply retail chain, said Friday it has agreed to be acquired for about $1.68 billion by a private investment group. Its shares climbed 44 percent.

The deal marked the latest example of the attraction that solid retail cash flows and real estate assets have for private equity investors.

The investor firms Leonard Green &Partners LP and Texas Pacific Group are offering $29 per share in cash for Petco, a 45 percent premium over its closing price of $19.45 on Thursday.

For Leonard Green, the purchase marks something of a full circle. The Los Angeles firm was a part owner of Petco before the retailer went public in February 2002.

Shares of pet retailers have suffered amid concern about high gas prices. Petco’s stock had fallen by half since January 2005.

The private equity firms likely saw investor disfavor as a buying opportunity, said David Schick, an analyst at Stifel, Nicolaus &Co., a brokerage firm in New York.

“They know that there are good cycles and bad cycles,” Schick said. “You want to buy when it’s getting worse and sell when it’s getting better.”

A spokesman for the private firms, Owen Blicksilver, said the buyers declined to comment on the sale.

Petco, based in San Diego, said its board unanimously approved the proposed deal. The transaction is expected to close by this year’s fourth quarter, pending shareholder and regulatory approval.

Petco shares climbed $8.46 to $27.91 in late-afternoon trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

The buyers also would assume about $120 million in debt in the deal, Petco said. That would boost the total value of the transaction to $1.8 billion.

Petco is second only to PetSmart Inc. among the nation’s biggest pet supply retailers. Petco sells pet food, supplies and services, and has more than 775 stores in 47 states and the District of Columbia.

PetSmart, based in Phoenix, will benefit from Petco’s new ownership, Schick said. He predicted that a privately owned Petco would be less inclined to cut prices to bolster sales and feel less pressure to expand. The sale also will boost the value that investors put on PetSmart, he said.

PetSmart shares climbed 86 cents, 3.7 percent, to $24.33 in late-afternoon trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

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