Europe’s biggest bakeries banking on US growth with M&A activity

Large European bakeries like Vandemoortele and La Lorraine are pumping funds into the North American market through mergers and acquisitions, as sector optimism becomes rampant among bakery industry experts there.

Many US bakery bosses expect revenues to be higher in 2024, with 53% projecting a “significant gain” over the previous year, a survey of 40 industry executives by LEK Consulting and Houlihan Lokey has shown.

Ninety-five percent of those asked expected volume sales to rise on last year, and three-quarters predicted profits would top 2023’s by “a significant margin”.

Investment priorities for US bakery businesses

Some 58% of bosses also expected to see more capital investment in the industry than in 2023, with 84% targeting capacity growth and 63% prioritising automation.

What types of bakery innovation is happening in the US?

Driving US baker’s optimism was opportunity to expand; innovation in new formats and flavour formulas; emerging categories; and pricing stability.

Recent US bakery innovation has included a cookie play on the popular red velvet cake by Otis Spunkmeyer. Also, Subway’s new Sidekicks snack collection that includes footlong versions of Cinnabon churros and Auntie Anne’s pretzels sold nearly 30m items within five months of its January launch, claimed the sandwich chain.

The buoyant market, as well as optimism for future growth, has spurred significant M&A activity, particularly from big European players expanding their North American presence.

Fig 2 bakery optimism

Bakery industry optimism

Vandemoortele, a Belgium-based family-owned bakery, acquired a majority stake in Danish pastries maker Banneton in April for an undisclosed sum.