Henkell Freixenet is in talks to acquire a majority stake in French Champagne producer Maison Pommery & Associés.

A statement from Maison Pommery yesterday (2 June) confirmed it had started talks with Henkell International, a subsidiary of Henkell Freixenet.

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The talks, which will go on for two months, are over “a proposed strategic combination” that would see Henkell Freixenet take a majority shareholding in the Pommery Champagne brand owner.

Maison Pommery said the “proposed partnership between two family-owned groups would create a global player in sparkling wine”.

The group’s board has formed an ad hoc committee made up mostly of independent directors to monitor the talks. It added there is no guarantee that the talks will bring about a deal.

The talks are subject to due diligence, final contracts, consultations, and regulatory approvals, Maison Pommery added.

The group also noted it “will continue its activities in the ordinary course of business”.

Henkell Freixenet declined to comment further on the news when approached by Just Drinks “due to confidentiality considerations”.

Maison Pommery operates in France’s Champagne, Provence, Camargue regions, as well as in the Douro Valley in Portugal.

In the group’s results for last year, issued in March, Maison Pommery, formerly called Vranken-Pommery Monopole, reported a 3.6% drop in consolidated revenue to €293.2m ($340.4m).

Maison Pommery posted a net income of €31.9m for 2025, versus €800,000 a year earlier. The jump was attributed to the disposal of Heidsieck & Co Monopole last year to Lanson-BCC.

Operating income climbed 83% to €64.1m, driven by a €44.3m net capital gain from the sale of Heidsieck & Co Monopole, as well as “controlled business activity in a challenging 2025 market environment”.

In 2025, Maison Pommery’s net financial debt stood at €754.4m, a €3.9m reduction on the year prior.

Meanwhile, Henkell Freixenet recorded net revenue of €1.25bn in 2025, up 0.5% year-over-year.