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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Asda to be sold to petrol station billionaires in £6.8bn deal

Mohsin and Zuber Issa started their Euro Garages business with one petrol station in Greater Manchester - it now has sales of more than £18bn

An Asda store(Image: PA)

Supermarket chain Asda is to be sold to two brothers from Blackburn in a deal worth £6.8bn.

The new owners, Mohsin and Zuber Issa, who are backed by investment firm TDR Capital, founded their Euro Garages business in 2001 with a single petrol station in Bury which they bought for £150,000. The business now has sites in Europe, the United States and Australia and annual sales of around £18bn.

The new owners say they will maintain pay levels for Asda staff and say the chain will have low prices for food and petrol for customers. They have also pledged to increase the proportion of goods bought from º£½ÇÊÓÆµ suppliers and will source all of their beef from this country.

Current American owners Walmart, which bought Asda in 1999 for £6.7bn, will retain a small stake in the business.

Asda will remain headquartered in Leeds, and will continue to be led by chief executive Roger Burnley.

Mohsin and Zuber Issa said: “We are very proud to be investing in Asda, an iconic British business that we have admired for many years. Asda’s customer-centric philosophy, focus on operational excellence and commitment to the communities in which it operates are the same values that we have built EG Group on.

“Asda’s performance through the Covid-19 pandemic has demonstrated the fundamental strength and resilience of the business, and we are excited to support Roger and his team as they continue to reposition the business to drive long-term growth.