French antitrust clears Carrefour's acquisition of Delhaize's French business
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 13, 2025
1 min readLast updated: January 24, 2026
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 13, 2025
1 min readLast updated: January 24, 2026
Carrefour's acquisition of Delhaize's French business is approved by French antitrust, requiring the sale of eight stores to competitors.
PARIS (Reuters) - French antitrust authority said on Thursday it had approved the acquisition by Carrefour of the French business of Belgian retailer Louis Delhaize on the condition that eight stores would be sold to competitors.
Carrefour said in a separate statement it would start talks with potential buyers with the goal to sell the eight stores -- five hypermarkets and three supermarkets with total sales slightly above 300 million euros, by end 2025.
The deal clinched with Louis Delhaize gives Carrefour control over the Cora and Match stores in France as well as the Provera purchasing unit, Carrefour added, confirming a goal to generate synergies of 130 million euros by 2027 from the acquisition.
(Reporting by Dominique Vidalon; Editing by Makini Brice)
The main topic is Carrefour's acquisition of Delhaize's French business, approved by French antitrust with conditions.
The condition is that Carrefour must sell eight stores to competitors.
Carrefour expects to generate synergies of 130 million euros by 2027.
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