20240828 Biz Spot main

Marriage of convenience? Canada's Alimentation Couche-Tard has made an ambitious, preliminary takeover approach for the Japanese company that owns 7-Eleven. (Photos by Reuters and Yuji Murakami)

With 7-Eleven on buyout menu, Japanese owner Seven & i reaches crossroads

Couche-Tard targets food business, U.S. market; regulatory, antitrust issues weigh

TOKYO -- In May this year, Japan's Seven & i Holdings celebrated 50 years of flagship 7-Eleven stores in its domestic market, with thoughts turning to how it might develop the world's biggest convenience retail chain over the next five decades.

Just three months on, management at the retailer with a market value of $38 billion is already at a crossroads: Accept an ambitious, preliminary takeover approach from Canadian peer Alimentation Couche-Tard; encourage the Japanese government to block it on economic-security grounds; or walk away and risk the ire of already-restless activist investors and even a hostile bid.

Sponsored Content

About Sponsored ContentThis content was commissioned by Nikkei's Global Business Bureau.