20th century The company was founded by Canadian
W. Garfield Weston in 1935, initially as Food Investments Limited, with the name changing to Allied Bakeries Limited a month later. Between 1935 and 1956, ten national and regional bakery companies were acquired by Allied, including Barrett and Pomeroy, and London and Provincial Bakeries. The largest acquisition at this time was in 1955 when Allied bought the British operations of the
Aerated Bread Company, founded in 1862. This acquisition included both the bakery business and the chain of cafeterias, the A.B.C. Tearooms. Allied paid
$8.1 million for A.B.C. At that time, Allied had a large share of the UK baked goods market. Allied's market share prior to acquiring A.B.C. was 10% of all UK bread production and the sale of 20 million biscuits per day. Allied's sales the year prior were $154 million with
profits of $12.6 million in current dollars. With the acquisition of A.B.C., Allied almost doubled its share of the UK's bread market by the end of the decade. In December 1954 they purchased from Howardsgate Trust the single
Fine Fare Supermarket in
Welwyn Garden City, the Welwyn Store grocery branches and the bakery businesses owned by the Trust. Allied, under its new name, adopted in 1960, of Associated British Foods, continued to run A.B.C. as a separate brand after its takeover, with a major A.B.C. bakery in
Camden Town, London. This closed in 1982 and the A.B.C. name was retired. Following the death of the founder in 1978, control of the company was passed on to his son
Garry, while the North American operations fell to his son
Galen. The company sold Fine Fare in 1986 to the Dee Corporation, and in 1991, went on to acquire
British Sugar. In 1997, ABF sold its retail operations in Ireland (including Northern Ireland) to
Tesco. These businesses were:
Quinnsworth and
Crazy Prices in the Republic of Ireland and
Stewarts Supermarket Limited and Crazy Prices in Northern Ireland. This sale also included the Stewarts Winebarrel off-licence chain, Lifestyle Sports & Leisure Ltd (a retail sports and leisure business), Kingsway Fresh Foods (a meat processing facility) and Daily Wrap Produce (a fruit and vegetable packaging plant). In May 1994,
Greggs acquired the
Bakers Oven chain from the company.
21st century In 2000, the company sold its interests in Burton's Biscuits. In 2002, it acquired the Mazola corn oil, Argo and Kingsford's cornstarch, Karo and Golden Griddle syrups, and Henri's dressing brands, along with several Canadian brands, from
Unilever; in 2004, it acquired the Tone's spice business and Fleischman yeast business from
Burns Philp; and in 2007, it purchased
Patak's Indian food business. On 26 March 2011, Associated British Foods, and its parent company
Wittington Investments, were targeted over
tax avoidance by
UK Uncut during
anti-cuts protests. The tax avoidance scheme involved moving capital between ABF/Primark and the affiliated
Luxembourg entity ABF European Holdings & Co SNC by means of interest-free loans, avoiding tax of about £9.7 million per year. The protest took the form of a mass
sit-in in
Fortnum & Mason. In 2013, the firm denied "illegal and immoral" tax evasion after it was accused by an international charity of moving its profits outside
Zambia to reduce its tax bill.
ActionAid said Zambia Sugar, a unit of AB Foods, had made profits of $123 million since 2007, but had paid "virtually no corporate tax" in Zambia. In October 2013, the company denied being involved in unscrupulous uses of land, in an article containing reports of forced evictions by other companies. In November 2024,
George G. Weston, chief executive of ABF claimed that the recent UK Budget may lead it to invest more outside the UK over fears the High Street will bear the "weight of tax rises". However, in August 2025, ABF announced that they had agreed to purchase rival to its bread brand,
Hovis from owners
Endless for £75m, but the
Competition and Markets Authority is expected to review the deal. In November 2025, ABF announced that it was exploring spinning-off its retail division Primark into its own entity. == Operations ==