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Reuters
Reuters
Business

New Zealand's Fonterra among investors in German food start-up YFood

German startup YFood products are seen in this handout illustration taken on February 25, 2020. YFOOD/Illustration/Handout via REUTERS.

Fonterra <FCG.NZ> has joined a group of companies investing 15 million euros ($16.3 million) in German food start-up YFood, according to a statement on Tuesday, the latest sign that companies are aiming to tap global shifts in eating habits.

The "Series B" funding was led by London-based venture capital firm Felix Capital and apart from Fonterra included existing investors in YFood, Five Seasons Ventures and New Ground Ventures, YFood said in a release.

YFood declined to say how much each company had invested.

German startup YFood founders Ben Kremer and Noel Bollmann pose for a photo in unknown location, April 9, 2020. YFOOD/Handout via REUTERS.

The company, set up in 2017, makes vegetarian bars, drinks and powders as snacks and meals aimed at supplying balanced food for people on the go, which are sold in over 13,000 shops in most European countries.

YFood said it will use the funds to expand further in Europe. It recently launched an online shop in the UK.

It will also draw on Fonterra's expertise in ingredients, intellectual property and patents to invest more in research and product development.

FILE PHOTO: The Fonterra logo is seen near the Fonterra Te Rapa plant near Hamilton August 6, 2013. REUTERS/Nigel Marple/File Photo

"This strategic partnership enables us to utilise Fonterra's knowledge to continuously improve our existing products in terms of taste, nutritional value and added benefits like we have done in the past," said YFood co-founder Noël Bollmann in a statement to Reuters.

The investment comes as Fonterra, the world's top dairy exporter, offloads overseas milk production centres as part of a "back-to-basics" strategy aimed at cutting debt after its ill-fated overseas expansion saw profits smashed. [nL3N26G43B]

It has also been looking for alternative types of nutrients for its products as appetite for meat substitutes rises around the world.

FILE PHOTO: A Fonterra milk tanker drives past dairy cows as it arrives at Fonterra's Te Rapa plant near Hamilton, New Zealand August 6, 2013. REUTERS/Nigel Marple/File Photo

Last year, the company bought a minority stake in U.S.-based Motif Ingredients, a start-up using fermentation technology to create ingredients that mimic milk and egg proteins. [nL3N20O14J]

It also comes as the global dairy market struggles with falling demand for milk and other products as the food service sector shuts down due to the coronavirus pandemic. [nL1N2BN17S]

Felix Capital's portfolio includes the likes of food delivery company Deliveroo, Farfetch, Peloton <PTON.O> and HungryPanda.

($1 = 0.9193 euros)

(Reporting by Josephine Mason; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)

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