South Africa
Dutch brewing giant Heineken will buy a majority stake in brewers in South Africa and Namibia, companies said on Monday, creating a booze behemoth in a region currently dominated by rival Anheuser-Busch InBev.
Heineken plans to acquire South Africa's Distell and Namibia Breweries in a combined deal valued at around $4.6 billion (four billion euro).
"We are very excited to bring together three strong businesses to create a regional beverage champion, perfectly positioned to capture significant growth opportunities in Southern Africa," said Heineken's CEO Dolf van den Brink in a statement.
Distell CEO Richard Rushton sees the deal as having "the potential to leverage the strength of Heineken's global footprint with our leading brands to create a formidable, diverse beverage company for Africa".
Amsterdam-based Heineken is the world's number two brewer behind Belgian-Brazilian giant AB InBev.
In 2016, AB InBev took over South African Breweries as part of a blockbuster SABMiller buyout, and enjoys an estimated 80 percent of the beer market by volume in South Africa.
Go to video
Ireland edges South Africa in Rugby World Cup clash of titans
01:12
South Africa: Unusual waves hit the coast of Cape Town
02:49
South Africa’s Russia trained medical graduates struggle to find job
Go to video
Johnson & Johnson under investigation in South Africa over 'excessive' drug prices
00:43
South Africa's Malcolm Marx out of Rugby World Cup with long-term knee injury
01:53
Cape Town clamps down on illegal electricity connections