- Lebanon crowdfunded ambulances under fire in Israel-Hezbollah war
- S Korean Nobel winner Han Kang hopes daily life 'won't change much'
- Pakistan extend lead beyond 200 in second England Test
- Liam Payne: One Direction singer swept up by teenage stardom
- Zelensky defends 'victory plan' at EU and NATO
- Vietnam death row tycoon jailed for life in separate trial
- Hard talk on migration tops agenda at EU summit
- Beckham says Ratcliffe needs time to revive Man Utd
- Conway puts New Zealand in lead after India bowled out for 46
- New Japan PM sends offering to Yasukuni war shrine
- S Korean court recognises misogyny as hate crime motive
- Couche-Tard executives in Japan to push 7-Eleven deal
- Martin targets mistake-free Australia MotoGP as Bagnaia lurks
- Tennis world No. 1 Swiatek hires stars' coach Fissette
- French Senate speaker 'astounded' by Macron 'ignorance' on Israel
- Israel strikes Syria, US pounds Huthis in Yemen
- India all out for record home Test low of 46 against New Zealand
- China says UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy to visit this week
- Iran Guards chief warns will hit Israel 'painfully' if attacks Iranian targets
- Pakistan tottering at 43-3 in England Test after Bashir takes three
- Zelensky in Brussels to defend 'victory plan' at EU and NATO
- Markets mixed as China's latest stimulus leaves traders wanting
- Climate-hit Pacific Islands plot landmark UN court case
- India collapse to 34-6 after opting to bat against New Zealand
- Israel strikes Syrian city, US pounds Huthis in Yemen
- Taiwan's TSMC posts sharp rise in third quarter net profit
- Pakistan's Sajid takes seven as England all out 291, trail by 75
- Kenya Senate to vote on deputy president's impeachment
- Bronski Beat's gay anthem 'Smalltown Boy' strikes chord 40 years on
- NATO to weigh Zelensky plan in US vote's shadow
- Trial into Brazil mining disaster to open in London
- Italy's Di Giannantonio to miss final two MotoGP for surgery
- Hard talk on migration expected at EU summit
- South Korea's Hwang Ui-jo faces four years in jail for sex video
- Israel pounds Hezbollah strongholds in Lebanon
- India slams 'cavalier' Trudeau in Sikh separatist murder row
- 'Love match' apps rival traditional matchmaking in Pakistan
- Asian markets rally but China's latest stimulus leaves traders wanting
- UN report says 1.1 billion people in acute poverty
- Vietnam death row tycoon awaits verdict in new trial
- 'Our time has come': the female Indian director hoping to make Oscars history
- Bondi beach 'closed' as Sydney shores hit by 'tar balls'
- Dodgers smash Mets to seize lead in MLB playoff series
- China to almost double support for unfinished housing projects
- King Charles heads to Australia, a nation shrugs
- China to boost credit for property market, renovate 1 mn homes
- New York fight back to take 2-1 lead over Lynx in WNBA Finals
- Family feud reignites over Singapore ex-PM's historic home
- ECB set to cut rates again as inflation cools
- Malinin, Sakamoto headline pre-Winter Olympics figure skating season
Couche-Tard executives in Japan to push 7-Eleven deal
Executives from Canada's Alimentation Couche-Tard are in Japan in a bid to overcome resistance to their $47-billion takeover of 7-Eleven's parent but are being given the cold shoulder, according to interviews published Thursday.
Seven & i Holdings last month rejected a US$40-billion takeover bid -- representing the biggest foreign takeover of a Japanese firm -- but the Canadian side has since sweetened the offer by around 20 percent.
"We have invited (Seven & i management), we have tried to organise a meeting, but it didn't work, but it will eventually," ACT chairman and founder Alain Bouchard told Bloomberg News in Japan.
"We also want to gain a better understanding of the Japanese culture, but mainly now the Japanese concerns" around the deal, he said in the interview.
"We want to obviously introduce ourselves because people don't know us."
Bouchard also told the Nikkei daily that they had asked to meet Seven & i president Ryuichi Isaka and his team but that the request "was declined".
The Financial Times quoted a source close to Seven & i saying that while a meeting had yet to be agreed, the two groups had been discussing the terms under which one might take place.
A cherished one-stop shop for everything from rice balls to concert tickets to photocopies, 7-Eleven "konbini" are a ubiquitous sight in Japan.
It is the world's biggest convenience store chain with more than 85,000 outlets worldwide, a quarter of them in Japan.
But Bouchard, 75, said that Japan had nothing to fear.
"We don't change the model. We adapt. We take the best practices from the stores we acquire, or we combine, and we take our best practices together," Bouchard told Bloomberg.
"We'll keep the people that run this company here, and they will hopefully share our culture, and we will share their culture, and we will be just strong," he said.
He added that no Canadian executive would be parachuted into Japan to take over the local operations.
ACT chief executive Alex Miller also told the Nikkei that the firm wanted to buy the whole of Seven & i after the Japanese firm last week said it was carving off its non-core operations into a separate entity.
"We don't want to buy a part of the company," Miller said.
And Brian Hannasch, former CEO and now special adviser, told the FT: "Our offer is a certainty, right, it's cash, versus a hope that (Seven & i) can continue to execute on a plan that's not delivered value over the last years"
Seven & i minority shareholder Artisan Partners this week urged the firm to accept ACT's offer, which the Japanese company said it is studying.
A.Mahlangu--AMWN