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Brexit delays Unilever’s HQ  decision on UK or Netherlands

epa05799445 (FILE) - The headquarters of Anglo-Dutch multinational consumer goods company Unilever in London, Britain, 01 October 2013. Reports on 17 February 2017 state Unilever has turned down a takeover offer from US-based food manufacturing giant Kraft. Kraft, that produces popular consumer goods such as Heinz ketchup, said they would still continue to try and reach an agreement with Unilever.  EPA/ANDY RAIN

Bloomberg

Anglo-Dutch consumer-goods giant Unilever wants to consolidate its headquarters in the UK or the Netherlands, but Brexit is making it harder to choose.
The maker of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream and Dove soap said in a statement that a review of the dual structure is “progressing well,” after CEO Paul Polman told the Financial Times he would advocate delaying the decision because of a “moving playing field—with political turbulence out there.”
Unilever said in April it would consider doing away with its long-standing policy of maintaining separate corporations based in London and Rotterdam.
A streamlined structure would be “in the best interests of Unilever and its shareholders as a whole, providing greater ongoing strategic flexibility for value-creating portfolio change,” the company said. Its shares were up 1.2 percent in Amsterdam.
Unilever previously said it hoped to decide on a single base by the end of December—just as talks on the UK’s departure from the European Union come to a head. UK PM Theresa May has less than a week to come up with a new offer on the country’s Brexit divorce bill if she wants to break the deadlock in negotiations by the end of the year.
The strategic review followed Unilever’s rebuff of an unsolicited $143 billion takeover bid from Kraft Heinz Co. By moving to consolidate its headquarters, the company waded into a political storm with governments in both countries putting up a fight to keep the base. Making the decision even more difficult, Dutch lawmakers are seeking to abolish the country’s 15 percent withholding tax on dividends, a move that could help resident companies fend off hostile takeovers.
Dual Structure
The dual structure has been a feature of Unilever since it was formed in 1930 from the merger of a Dutch margarine maker with a British soap provider.
The legal setup means the company has two boards, governance rules, shareholder bases and annual meetings. The company prepares separate accounts in euros and
in pounds.
As Unilever’s strategic review progresses, the company is preparing for broader changes, including a sale of its slow-growing spreads business. It has also hired executive search firm Egon Zehnder International to help it find a successor to Polman, who has served as CEO since 2009, according to a person familiar with the matter.
European Council President
Donald Tusk gave May until December 4 to make extra efforts to resolve the differences between London and Brussels—most notably on the money and the thorny question of the future of the border between Ireland and Northern Ireland, which is part of the UK.

epa05892622 Exterior of Unilever building at the Weena in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, 06 April 2017. Unilever quits the production of margarine, with brands such as Becel, Blue Band, Bona and Zeeuws Meisje. Unilever margarine division is being put up for sale after the takeover bid from US rival Kraft Heinz.  EPA/Marco de Swart

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