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Brown‑Forman shares drop as deal talks with French spirits group Pernod collapse

By Thomson Reuters Apr 29, 2026 | 6:29 AM

By Savyata Mishra

April 29 (Reuters) – Shares of Brown-Forman fell about 6% in premarket trading on Wednesday after the Jack Daniel’s whiskey maker and France’s Pernod Ricard scrapped their ​merger talks, turning investor focus back to a tougher ‌demand environment.

The discussions, first disclosed in March, ended by mutual agreement after the companies failed to reach mutually acceptable terms, they said on Tuesday.

A tie-up would have created a strong challenger to global spirits leader Diageo and given ‌the ​combined group greater leverage in the ⁠crucial U.S. market.

Pernod said in ⁠an internal memo seen by Reuters that the potential for the merger was real, but the necessary conditions to continue the project were not met.

“We felt that momentum toward a ​deal was stronger vs. historical speculation given the challenging operating environment and strategic rationale of combining with (Pernod)…” J.P.Morgan analysts said.

The brokerage ⁠downgraded the stock to ‘underperform’ from ‘neutral’ and ⁠cut price target to $23 from $27.

Brown‑Forman, whose shares were ​trading at $26 before the bell, said it would focus on its ​strategic and operational priorities, including expanding its geographic footprint.

Fireball maker ‌Sazerac, which has offered about $15 billion for Brown‑Forman, according to a Reuters report, remains a potential bidder.

But the collapse of the talks with Pernod has reduced the chances of a bidding war ⁠for Brown‑Forman, leaving uncertainty over whether discussions with Sazerac will result in a deal, said William Cain, head of M&A analytics at Mergermarket.

“With ⁠less strategic fit, a ‌potentially more burdensome regulatory process and likely ⁠less control than a Pernod Ricard deal, we ​view a ‌takeover by Sazerac as lower probability,” JPMorgan ​analyst Drew Levine ⁠said.

Brown-Forman’s stock has lost about 19% of its value in the past 12 months amid slowing spirits demand and cost pressures, though shares surged about 18% since the news of deal talks emerged.

(Reporting by Savyata Mishra in Bengaluru and Tassilo Hummel in Italy; Editing ​by Arun Koyyur)