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K-Cup maker Keurig to be bought by German conglomerate JAB for $14B

Keurig Green Mountain Inc, the maker of K-Cup single-serve coffee pods, said it would be bought by an investor group led by Germanys JAB Holding Co. for about $13.9-billion US.

JAB owns brands like cosmetics maker Coty and shoemaker Jimmy Choo

Keurig's shares have fallen sharply this year, so JAB's offer represents an almost 80 per cent premium. (Brendan McDermid/Reuters)

The battle over the world's coffee drinkers is getting hotter.

Keurig, the maker of single-cup coffee machines sitting on millions of kitchen counters, agreed to sell itself Monday for almost $14 billion to JAB Holding Co., a private company with a growing java business.

Fans of Keurig may not see much of a difference in their caffeine fix. JAB Holding said Keurig will operate independently and remain in its headquarters in Waterbury, Vermont.

The Keurig deal will boost JAB Holding's already robust coffee empire. The Luxembourg-based company has a controlling stake in Jacobs Douwe Egberts, the company behind Gevalia, Tassimo and many other brands. It also has stakes in Peet's Coffee & Tea and Caribou Coffee, two companies that already have deals in place to make coffee pods for Keurig machines.

JAB trying to rival Nestle

Buying Keurig will get JAB Holding closer to coffee market leader Nestle, said Stifel analyst Mark Astrachan, in a note to clients. He also said that JAB Holding may try to sell more Keurig brewing machines internationally.

Outside of coffee, JAB Holding has stakes in beauty products maker Coty and high-end shoe seller Jimmy Choo.

The deal comes as Keurig has reported slowing sales of its machines and K-cups, the coffee-filled pods that are used in Keurig's machines. Sales of K-cups, which accounted for more than 80 per cent of Keurig's revenue, rose 1 per cent to $3.6 billion in the year ending Sept. 26. Sales of its machines fell 23 per cent to $632.6 million in the same period.

Its stock has suffered too, falling nearly 61 per cent since the beginning of the year. In 2011, the company was valued at more than $150 per share.

But JAB Holding sees value in Keurig: It offered $92 for each share of Keurig, a 78 per cent premium from the stock's closing price of $51.70 on Friday. The deal jolted shares of Keurig Green Mountain Inc. up more than 73 per cent to $89.54 in afternoon trading Monday.

In September, Keurig moved beyond coffee. It launched Keurig Kold, a $300 machine that makes single-glasses of Coca-Cola and other sodas. Coca-Cola Co. is Keurig's largest shareholder with a 17.4 per cent stake, according to FactSet. The world's largest soda maker said Monday that it supports the sale to JAB Holding.

The deal is expected to close in the first quarter of next year.

With files from CBC News