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Sources say that Itochu will not participate in the Seven & i Buyout.

Sources say that Itochu will not participate in the Seven & i Buyout.

Two sources familiar with the matter have confirmed that Japan's Itochu has withdrawn from a proposed buyout of Seven & i Holdings by the founding family.

Seven & i founders Ito family started talks with the Canadian company Alimentation Couche-Tard to privatize the company for a reported $58 billion.

Nikkei reported on Wednesday morning that Itochu decided to not participate in the purchase.

Nikkei reported that Itochu considered investing 1 trillion yen (6.69 billion dollars) but saw little synergy between its food and beverages business and Seven & i.

Seven & i & Itochu declined comment.

Itochu's decision not to continue casts doubt on the Ito Family's management buyout proposal, which if successful would be the largest ever in history.

The operator of 7-Eleven convenience store around the globe could go private and retain their management, remove shareholder pressure to sell more assets and eliminate any threat from bidders that they may view as hostile.

A management buyout could be used to force Couche-Tard into a higher bid.

The CEO of Seven & i, a Canadian retailer, said that it would continue to pursue a contract with Seven & i.

Itochu's reported involvement was complicated by its ownership of FamilyMart, a convenience store chain that competes with Seven & i.

Charoen Pkphand Group subsidiary CP All Pcl, which had been reported to be considering an investment, announced in a Wednesday statement that it did not intend to invest in a Japanese retail company.

The Thai company did not identify the firm, but said that its investment policies are geared towards supporting business growth. The Japanese broadcaster NHK reported in January Seven & i’s founding family had asked the CP Group for investment in a management-led buyout of Tokyo-based retailer giant.

CP All shares closed Wednesday at 54.25 baht each, a 10.2% increase.

Sources have confirmed that the Ito family approached several private equity firms to support their bid.

Bloomberg News reported that Apollo Global Management may invest up to 1.5 trillion yen, Bloomberg News last month.

Two other sources confirmed that Seven & i was also close to a deal with private equity firm Bain Capital to sell a portion of its non-core business assets.

York Holdings, the retailer's non-core business unit, includes its supermarket operations.

The unit will include 31 subsidiaries, including the superstores of the group, the baby goods store Akachan Honpo, and the company which operates Denny's in Japan.

Bain reported that it offered approximately 1.2 trillion yen to buy these assets in December.

Bain declined comment. ($1 = 149.4400 Japanese yen) (Reporting and editing by Christian Schmollinger and Christina Fincher; Kane Wu and Rishav chatterjee, in Bangaluru and Hong Kong; and Leroy Leo, Philippa Fletcher and Christian Schmollinger)

(source: Reuters)