Del Monte secures second buyer in Sundrop stake sell-down
Del Monte Pacific Ltd.’s (DMPL) subsidiary, DMPL India Holdco, has found a second buyer for the piecemeal sale of its 14.38-percent stake in Sundrop Brands Ltd., following the completion of the first tranche sale worth $14.8 million.
In a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE), DMPL said its subsidiary entered into a separate share purchase agreement (SPA) on Dec. 24, 2025, with an independent third-party buyer, or the second buyer, for the sale of an additional 547,946 ordinary shares in Sundrop Brands, representing approximately a 1.45-percent equity interest.
“The terms of this additional SPA were agreed on an arm’s-length basis and are substantially similar to those of the tranche one disposal,” it noted.
DMPL last month said that DMPL India had entered into an SPA and an options agreement with CAG-Tech (Mauritius) Ltd.
Under the SPA, DMPL India sold 1.88 million ordinary shares, constituting approximately a 4.99-percent equity stake in Sundrop Brands, to CAG-Tech for $14.8 million.
Pursuant to the options agreement, CAG-Tech will be granted a call option to further purchase an additional 1.88 million shares in Sundrop Brands, while DMPL India will have a put option to sell these Sundrop option shares for $14.8 million.
Both the call option and the put option are exercisable after April 1, 2026.
Meanwhile, DMPL India said it intends to identify third-party purchasers for the sale of the remaining 1.66 million Sundrop Brands shares, which constitute approximately a 4.4-percent equity stake in the company.
It added that the sale of the remaining shares will be on terms more or less similar to the tranche one disposal and noted that the Sundrop Brands shares constitute a non-core asset of Del Monte Group.
“The proposed Sundrop disposal transactions allow the company to optimize its capital deployment strategy by realizing the latent value within this non-core public equity holding,” DMPL said.
This is expected to immediately improve DMPL’s balance sheet liquidity and enhance financial flexibility for deployment toward strategic, value-accretive initiatives within the company’s other core business segments.
DMPL also noted that the proposed Sundrop disposal transaction “is expected to mitigate risk and prevent further capital erosion by divesting a non-core public equity holding that exhibits declining value, thereby preserving capital for immediate and value-accretive reallocation into core business segments.”