Nestle Splits Off Freshly Meal Delivery Business

Contributes it to a joint venture with Kettle Cuisine owned by L Catterton.
Dec. 4, 2022
2 min read

Now that the Covid pandemic is (hopefully) winding down, Freshly, one of the leading home meal delivery businesses, is winding down also. Nestle is combining its $950 million 2020 acquisition, in which it had high hopes, with Kettle Cuisine in a joint venture led by investment firm L Catterton.

In a Nov. 29 investor day presentation, Nestle also said it’s searching for a home for its peanut allergy treatment Palforzia, the most interesting part of its $2.6 billion acquisition Aimmune Therapeutics.

Nestle CEO Mark Schneider called the two businesses, both costly 2020 acquisitions, “two transactions that did not meet our objectives fully.” He added, “The environment of 2020 fooled us.” While home delivery was hot during the pandemic, Schneider said Freshly now is confronting higher customer acquisition costs, lower customer retention and lower prospects for the business.

Kettle Cuisine, which is owned by Catterton, has been favoring its foodservice business rather than retail, and that’s apparently a model Freshly will follow. Schneider said Kettle and Freshly have in common a focus on freshness, and will direct efforts at foodservice operators who don’t have the labor to offer such fresh meals.

Financial details were not disclosed, but Catterton will own 59% of the business and Nestle 41%.

About the Author

Dave Fusaro

Editor in Chief

Dave Fusaro has served as editor in chief of Food Processing magazine since 2003. Dave has 30 years experience in food & beverage industry journalism and has won several national ASBPE writing awards for his Food Processing stories. Dave has been interviewed on CNN, quoted in national newspapers and he authored a 200-page market research report on the milk industry. Formerly an award-winning newspaper reporter who specialized in business writing, he holds a BA in journalism from Marquette University. Prior to joining Food Processing, Dave was Editor-In-Chief of Dairy Foods and was Managing Editor of Prepared Foods.

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