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Retail & Consumer

Hovis and Kingsmill breadmakers set for historic £75m merger after months of talks

Allied Bakeries, which owns Kingsmill, and Hovis could benefit from up to £50m of annual cost savings from a merger, with the former's parent company, Associated British Foods, set to acquire the latter for £75m

Hovis has been sold to private equity firm Endless for an undisclosed sum(Image: PA)

Historic bread makers Hovis and Kingsmill are poised for a landmark merger, with their respective owners expected to seal the deal following months of negotiations.

Kingsmill's parent company Allied Bakeries, which falls under London-listed Associated British Foods (ABF), alongside Hovis could reap annual cost savings of up to £50m through the proposed union, as reported by .

According to Sky News, the mooted arrangement would see ABF snap up Hovis for £75m.

This would wrest control of the bread manufacturer from private equity owners Endless, culminating months of talks between the investment firm and ABF.

Industry insiders suggest a formal agreement could materialise by the close of next week, though sources cautioned Sky about pinning down exact timelines given the deal's intricate nature.

If proceedings unfold as anticipated, the merger would bring together two of Britain's most venerable bread manufacturers under a single banner.

Allied Bakeries traces its roots to 1935 when William Garfield Weston established the company, whilst Hovis boasts even deeper heritage dating to the late 1800s when Herbert Grime claimed a £25 prize for devising the brand name from "Hominis Vis" – Latin for "strength of man."

Kingsmill and Hovis hoping to rise with merger

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ bakery sector commands roughly £5bn in yearly turnover, yet has endured significant pressures from soaring costs, niche rivals and evolving shopping patterns over the past decade.