News

American petcare-to-confectionery giant Mars Incorporated has agreed to buy British chocolate producer and retailer Hotel Chocolat for £534 million ($662 million) allowing the U.K. company to ...
Hotel Chocolat, which was founded 20 years ago, has been a London-listed firm for the past seven years, said the deal would allow the brand to "grow further and faster".
Hotel Chocolat listed on the London Stock Exchange in 2016 and peaked at £5.26 ($6.34) a share in late 2021, but the stock has struggled since then.
Hotel Chocolat is the latest in a long line of British companies to delist from the London market, after sinking its teeth into a sweet £534m deal to be bought out by the US giant Mars. The luxury ...
Hotel Chocolat describes the destination as a “luxury eco-hotel on our working cacao farm in the Caribbean”. ... to London in 2013. The brand actually started as an e-company back in 1993, ...
Investors responded by sending shares in Hotel Chocolat up by more than 160%, with the stock closing the day up 224p at 364p. The 375p per share cash offer represents a premium of nearly 170% on ...
Which is why we were so intrigued to try out Hotel Chocolat's Velvetiser.All chocolate fiends will know it was helmed as a game changer when it launched five years ago, promising the best velvety ...
Hotel Chocolat is the only independent premium chocolate company listed on the London stock exchange. They sell their products via a network of 96 stores in the UK, with 70% of their sales coming ...
Hotel Chocolat is the latest in a long line of British companies to delist from the London market, after sinking its teeth into a sweet £534m deal to be bought out by the US giant Mars.