Advertisement

Reuters: General Mills looks to sell Green Giant

The packaged food giant has retained investment bank to shop vegetable business

March 11, 2015 at 5:22PM
Green Giant is a brand of frozen and canned vegetables owned by General Mills. The mascot of Green Giant is the Jolly Green Giant.
Green Giant is a brand of frozen and canned vegetables owned by General Mills. The mascot of Green Giant is the Jolly Green Giant. (Dml -/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

General Mills is putting its Green Giant vegetable business on the sales block, according to Reuters.

The news service, citing "people familiar with the matter," said Mills is working on a potential sale with investment bank Rothschild. General Mills declined to comment to Reuters and the Star Tribune.

With Green Giant, General Mills is one of the top players in frozen and canned vegetables. But it's a mature, slow-growth industry, and it's getting squeezed by increasing consumer preferences for fresh vegetables.

So, peddling Green Giant would seem to make sense – if the price is right. Proceeds could be used to help fund new acquisitions of faster-growing businesses like Annie's, the organic macaroni and cheese maker that Mills bought last year for $820 million.

General Mills' frozen foods division, which included Green Giant frozen and canned vegetables and Totino's branded products, had sales of $1.5 billion in the company's most recent fiscal year – down 2 percent over the previous year.

Green Giant is known for its Jolly Green Giant mascot, and the brand has long been associated with Minnesota. Minneapolis-based Pillsbury bought the Green Giant company in 1979 and Golden Valley-based Mills bought Pillsbury in 2001.

Advertisement
about the writer

about the writer

Mike Hughlett

Reporter

Mike Hughlett covers energy and other topics for the Minnesota Star Tribune, where he has worked since 2010. Before that he was a reporter at newspapers in Chicago, St. Paul, New Orleans and Duluth.

See Moreicon

More from Business

See More
card image

Thirty years ago, when Sears was at the top of its game, the mall gave it a killer deal: a 99-year lease under which Sears would pay a mere $10 annually.

Advertisement
Advertisement

To leave a comment, .

Advertisement