By Dana Cimilluca

Advance Auto Parts Inc. (AAP) agreed to buy General Parts International Inc. for just over $2 billion in cash, a takeover that would create one of North America's largest aftermarket auto-parts providers.

Advance Auto shareholders greeted news of the deal enthusiastically, sending the company's stock up as much as 19%.

The deal would create a company with $9.2 billion in annual sales, comparable in size to the market's current biggest player, AutoZone Inc. (AZO) Advance Auto has about $6 billion in annual sales, with some 4,000 locations selling everything from batteries and air fresheners to pneumatic tools and engine parts--to both individuals and commercial buyers. Closely held General Parts has some $3 billion in annual sales, with about 2,600 Carquest locations--1,200 company-owned and 1,400 independent.

The deal would enable Advance Auto to penetrate more deeply into the bigger and faster-growing commercial auto parts market, which includes professional mechanics and from which the company currently gets about 40% of its sales. With cars becoming more sophisticated and complex, and with increasing amounts of electronics in them, more auto parts are being sold through that channel as opposed to so-called do-it-yourself buyers.

Raleigh, N.C.-based General Parts derives a greater proportion of its sales from commercial customers, and the deal is expected to boost the percentage of Advance Auto's sales coming from that segment to roughly 55%, according to people familiar with the matter.

The industry has also been buffeted by a weak economy, and the General Parts deal could help Advance Auto better cope with that by giving it greater scale and the scope to cut costs. Advance Auto operates in 39 states, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands and the acquisition is expected to fill out the company's footprint in the U.S. and Canada and lead to annual cost savings of roughly $160 million within three years.

The company also announced preliminary results for its third quarter Wednesday. While Advance Auto's sales for the period came in at $1.52 billion, a jump of 4.3% from the same period a year earlier, the increase was due in part to an acquisition and other store additions; comparable-store sales decreased 2%.

Despite the economic challenges, Roanoke, Va.-based Advance Auto's shares have performed well and were up 21% in the past year through Tuesday. The company's stock rose 17% on the New York Stock Exchange Wednesday morning to $96.36, giving it a market capitalization of $7.1 billion. The stock earlier leapt to $98.26, for a gain of 19%.

The deal would be the latest in a recent surge of retail M&A, as companies in the sector seek to fortify themselves in a difficult environment by combining to strip out costs, among other benefits. So far this year, $28.2 billion of U.S. retail merger deals have been struck, more than double the $12.8 billion total in the same period last year and the largest year-to-date tally since 2006, according to Dealogic.

General Parts was founded in 1962 by Chairman O. Temple Sloan Jr. His son, O. Temple Sloan III, is currently president and is expected to stay with the combined company.

Besides Carquest, General Parts also owns Worldpac, a big wholesale player in the faster-growing import market.

The deal would represent an about-face of sorts for Advance Auto, which was exploring a sale of itself, people familiar with the matter said late last year. Private-equity firms were considering a buyout of the company, one of the people said then.

The combined company's cash-flow generation is expected to enable Advance Auto to maintain its investment-grade credit rating.

Write to Dana Cimilluca at dana.cimilluca@wsj.com

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