Treasury Wine shares pile on the gains after French billionaire buys in

Treasury Wine Estates shares are enjoying some support on the news.

| More on:

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

Key points
  • A French billionaire has bought up a significant stake in Treasury Wine Estates.
  • He has a track record as an aggressive purchaser of businesses.
  • Treasury shares have had two positive sessions on the news.

Shares in Treasury Wine Estates Ltd (ASX: TWE) have piled on more than 10% across the past two trading days after it emerged that French billionaire Olivier Goudet had acquired a significant stake in the company.

Treasury lodged a statement with the ASX on Christmas Eve, indicating that Mr Goudet had increased his stake to 41 million shares in the Penfolds producer, with that stake worth about $226 million at the company's share price on Monday.

Cork popping out of wine bottle.

Image source: Getty Images

Corporate raider

Mr Goudet is well known in European business circles as the former head of JAB Holding, which managed the wealth of Germany's Reimann family.

While in that role, Mr Goudet spearheaded the takeover of companies including Krispy Kreme and Pret a Manger, and according to a report in The Australian, he also personally bought a chateau in Bordeaux with his wife in 2021.

Mr Goudet, who was also the former Chief Financial Officer at Mars, stepped down from JAB Holding in 2023.

Buying the dip

The significant shareholder notice lodged with the ASX shows Mr Goudet's Luxembourg-based company, Platin, started buying shares at $6.78 back in early October.

The purchases continued on an almost-daily basis right through to December 23, when Platin picked up 3.9 million shares for $5.

Treasury shares are down significantly from their 12-month highs of $11.48, achieved at about this time last year. The company recently wrote down the value of its US business by $687 million and warned in mid-December of ongoing weakness in its US and China businesses.

New Chief Executive Sam Fischer announced on December 17 that the company would launch a $100 million cost-cutting program, warning that "category dynamics have weakened in recent months''.

The company also said its ultra-luxury tiers, "while in growth globally, are performing below expectations, reflecting weakness in global fine wine markets''.

Mr Fischer said regarding the outlook:

We are currently experiencing category weakness in the US and China, two of our key growth markets, which will impact our business performance in the near-term. Maintaining the strength of our brands and the health of their respective sales channels is of critical importance to our Management team and our Board as we navigate through the current environment.

TWE is a high-quality business with strong foundations in place for sustainable, profitable growth. Our powerful portfolio of brands, leading market positions in attractive growth markets, unparalleled supply chain and highly engaged, capable team are all considerable strengths that position us strongly to deliver sustainable, profitable growth over the long-term.

Treasury shares traded as high as $5.54 on Monday before settling back to be 1.8% higher at $5.49.

Motley Fool contributor Cameron England has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Treasury Wine Estates. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Treasury Wine Estates. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on Consumer Staples & Discretionary Shares

Three women laughing and enjoying their gambling winnings while sitting at a poker machine.
Consumer Staples & Discretionary Shares

How high do UBS and Macquarie think this ASX gaming stock will go?

Despite a weaker-than-expected quarterly, there's upside to be had.

Read more »

Young man sitting at a table in front of a row of pokie machines staring intently at a laptop.
Consumer Staples & Discretionary Shares

Here's why Star Entertainment Group shares are sinking lower today

The broader issue weighing on the share price is uncertainty around Star’s turnaround.

Read more »

Several fingers point at stressed looking man in the middle.
Consumer Staples & Discretionary Shares

Tabcorp shares crash 25% as watchdog probe hits

Tabcorp shares plunge after AUSTRAC opens an investigation.

Read more »

A man sitting at a computer is blown away by what he's seeing on the screen, hair and tie whooshing back as he screams argh in panic.
Consumer Staples & Discretionary Shares

Why are Super Retail shares crashing 13% today?

Let's find out what is making investors hit the sell button on Thursday.

Read more »

A hip young man with a beard and manbun sits thoughtfully at his laptop computer in a darkened room, staring at the screen with his chin resting on his hand in thought.
Consumer Staples & Discretionary Shares

Tabcorp faces AUSTRAC compliance probe

Tabcorp is under AUSTRAC investigation over anti-money laundering compliance, with management pledging full cooperation and ongoing improvements.

Read more »

a woman wearing fashionable clothes and jewellery checks her phone with a satisfied smile on her face in a luxurous home setting.
Consumer Staples & Discretionary Shares

Super Retail Group provides a trading update

Super Retail Group posts modest sales growth and lifts cost guidance as macro headwinds challenge consumer demand for FY26.

Read more »

Person with large headphones looking puzzled holding their hand to their chin.
Consumer Staples & Discretionary Shares

Warning: JB Hi-Fi shares tumble as investors look past sales growth

JB Hi-Fi shares tumble after its latest sales update...

Read more »

Casino players throwing chips in the air.
Consumer Staples & Discretionary Shares

Have beaten-down ASX gaming stocks finally hit a bottom?

If sentiment improves, these shares could bounce back up to 70%.

Read more »