UPDATE 3-CVC buys Italy's IRCA from Advent in second food ingredients deal this year
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Adds valuation in first bullet point
By Elvira Pollina and Margaux Perrin
MILAN, June 29 (Reuters) - Private equity firm CVC CVC.AS on Monday said it had agreed to buy Italian dessert ingredients maker IRCA from rival fund Advent International, as consumer-focused businesses defy the disruption caused by artificial intelligence and the Middle East crisis.
No financial details were disclosed, but a source familiar with the matter said the deal valued IRCA at more than €2.5 billion
Advent acquired IRCA in 2022 from private equity firm Carlyle in a deal that valued the group at around €1 billion , sources said at the time.
Under Advent, IRCA has grown its revenue to €1.5 billion from €370 million in 2021.
CVC will work closely with IRCA to support further growth through expansion in the United States and other markets in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
The deal is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2026, subject to regulatory approvals.
Founded in 1919 near the northern Italian city of Varese, IRCA employs over 2,200 people and runs 19 production facilities across Europe, the United States and Vietnam.
It supplies professional customers in the pastry and ice-cream sectors across more than 100 countries with chocolate, creams and other semi-finished food ingredients.
Rothschild and UBS acted as advisers for Advent. Lazard and JP Morgan advised CVC.
IRCA is CVC's second major acquisition in the sector this year, after the Amsterdam-listed firm in May agreed to buy the food ingredients business of U.S. group International Flavors & Fragrances <IFF.N> for about $4.3 billion.
A rebound in activity in the private equity sector has not solved a persistent exit bottleneck, prompting firms to make increasing use of continuation funds and other secondary market solutions.
The stock of unrealized assets has grown to roughly 32,000 companies worth $3.8 trillion, consultancy Bain said in its latest report on the sector.
Cash paid out to investors as a share of net asset value has remained below 15% for four consecutive years, an industry record, Bain said, adding holding periods now hover around seven years, up from an average of five to six years between 2010 and 2021.
