Home Food Food delivery players will ‘look to expand their offerings and services into broader markets’, predicts report

Food delivery players will ‘look to expand their offerings and services into broader markets’, predicts report

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Food delivery players will ‘look to expand their offerings and services into broader markets’, predicts report

Food delivery businesses are weathering the global financial turmoil generally well, according to new analysis by global law firm Linklaters. From the start of March to the end of April, share prices of a selection of food delivery businesses were up between 5% and 14%, in contrast to the index of European consumer companies (STOXX Europe 600 Consumer Services), which was down by 12%.

While many restaurants have been forced to close in a bid to combat COVID-19, food delivery businesses are looking to evolve their business models by partnering with supermarkets, convenience stores and other retailers to deliver groceries as demand for home deliveries surges, the analysis observed.

It added it expects some softening in global deal-making to be expect as a result of COVID-19 but anticipates venture capitalists and private equity investors ‘to be curious’.

Consolidation on the rise

These developments come at a time of increased consolidation in the food delivery sector, with the last 12 months seeing the second-highest level of M&A by value, with nearly $10 billion worth of deals completed, according to Linklaters analysis.

“Whilst there has been a general upward trend in the level of M&A activity measured by deal value, the level of M&A activity measured by deal volume has decreased over the last 24-months, supporting the consolidation trend. Key markets seeing the largest levels of deal activity include Europe and the US, where nearly half of all deals have taken place over the last two years,” ​it said.