Seattle, Washington,
U.S.A.-based pollock- and hake-fishing firm American
Seafoods Group has paused its sale process. In May 2023, Bregal
Partners announced it would commence a sale process of its majority holding in the company.
But, in a 3 July announcement, American
Seafoods CEO Einar Gustafsson said
that process has been paused “so we can
continue to focus on our business and customers.”
“Our business remains
strong, and we look forward to revisiting these discussions when the
macroeconomic environment improves and when our valuation is consistent with
the strength of our company,” Gustafsson said. “With strong growth prospects ahead, American Seafoods is excited to
remove this overhang and refocus ourselves on our day-to-day operations.
Our company is poised to capitalize on the global seafood industry’s growing
demand for high-quality products, and now, we can get back to fully
concentrating on running the greatest fishing company in the world.”
Bregal Partners, a New York City-based private equity fund, previously said
it would seek to wrap up its Bregal Partners I portfolio, which includes
American Seafoods, West Coast Salmon – a land-based salmon farm
under development in the U.S. state of Nevada – and the now-defunct New Bedford, Massachusetts, U.S.A.-based groundfish-fishing
firm Blue Harvest Fisheries. With American Seafoods’ decision to pause its sales
process, the company will remain in the portfolio, according to the company.
Bregal Partners previously sought to sell its stake in American Seafoods in 2019 but was also unsuccessful in that instance.
In May 2023, Bregal Investments
Co-Founder Scott Perekslis left the firm to make a bid to purchase its seafood holdings, but a sale has not come to fruition.
Gustafsson told SeafoodSource in April 2023 the company had “a very strong balance
sheet,” having paid down much of its debt.
“I can't get into specifics, but
we are clearly well-positioned to both continue to invest in our business,
whether it's in the acquisitions – M&A-wise – new-builds, or existing
vessels. I think the company has never been as strong as it is now, in its
history, from a balance sheet point of view. We can hold inventory, we’re well within all
covenants, and we’ve got excess headroom on lines,” he said. “The biggest
challenge is I can’t mess it up. [Previous CEO] Mikel [Durham] did a phenomenal job of driving discipline,
and that paid off in a number of ways. We need to treat this asset with respect
and make sure that we invest wisely.”
American Seafoods
fishes and produces a range of fillet, surimi, roe, and block product offerings
made from Alaska pollock, Pacific hake, Pacific cod, and yellowfin sole, sold
globally. Gustafsson said the pollock market had been weak and that “big swings in the marketplace [were]
not a good thing” for the industry.
In February 2024, the company removed a major
impediment to a sale when it finalized a settlement with the U.S. government to resolve alleged Jones Act
violations stemming from the use of a dead-end railway in Canada known as the
Bayside Program.