Akzo Nobel to Sell Specialty Chemicals Unit to Carlyle for EUR10.1 Billion -- Update
27 Mars 2018 - 10:02AM
Dow Jones News
By Ben Dummett
A consortium led by U.S. private equity giant Carlyle Group LP
agreed Tuesday to buy the specialty chemicals business of Dutch
paints giant Akzo Nobel N.V. for EUR10.1 billion ($12.6 billion)
including debt, as the competition for bigger, riskier deals
between cash-rich buyout firms heats up.
Akzo's chemicals are used in a wide range of products from
plastic bags to solar panels. The sale is a key part of the
Amsterdam-based manufacturer's plan to boost its share price to
appease Elliott Management Corp., the U.S. activist hedge fund, and
other shareholders after successfully fending off a $27.6 billion
takeover bid last year from U.S. rival PPG Industries Inc.
The deal "is a key milestone...to generate value for all
stakeholders," Thierry Vanlancker, Akzo's chief executive, said in
a statement.
Carlyle and its partner GIC Pte. Ltd., Singapore's
sovereign-wealth fund, gain a business benefiting from increased
demand, particularly in Europe, amid improving economic conditions
and rising prices. For 2017, Akzo's chemicals business grew revenue
by 4% to almost EUR$5 billion from the year-before period, while
operating income gained 10% to EUR689 million.
That earnings momentum underscores a competitive auction process
for the specialty chemicals business. Carlyle beat out
private-equity firms Apollo Global Management and an alliance of
Bain Capital Private Equity and Advent International Corp.
Global private-equity firms are under increasing pressure to do
larger deals after the industry raised $453 billion in 2017, the
largest amount in any year, for a total over $1 trillion to invest,
according to data provider Preqin.
In December, KKR & Co. won an auction against Apollo and CVC
Capital Partners to acquire the margarine-and-spreads business of
Unilever PLC in a EUR6.8 billion deal.
In January, a Blackstone Group LP -led consortium struck a deal
to buy a controlling stake in the financial-information business of
Thomson Reuters Corp. for $17 billion.
However, bigger deals also come with greater risk if they don't
work out as demonstrated by the bankruptcies of Toys "R" Us Inc.
and iHeart Media Inc.
"Were the industry to perform due diligence on itself, these
trends would raise a red flag," management consulting firm Bain
& Co. said in a recent private-equity report referencing the
pressure to complete bigger transactions.
Still, Carlyle has had success investing in the chemicals
sector. In 2016, the firm struck a $3.2 billion deal to acquire
Atotech Solutions, a supplier of plating chemicals used in circuit
boards and semiconductor manufacturing from French energy giant
Total SA.
It also made a successful bet on its acquisition of Axalta
Coating Systems Ltd.It bought the U.S. company from DuPont Co. for
$4.9 billion and the assumption of $250 million in pension costs in
2013. It then installed a new chief executive and chief financial
officer, who oversaw new investments in emerging markets and a
cost-cutting effort. Carlyle took Axalta public in 2014, generating
a return of more than double the cash it invested in the business
by the next year through a partial sale of its shares.
Akzo, which traces its roots in part back to dynamite inventor
Alfred Nobel, said it would generate proceeds of about EUR7.5
billion from the sale and expects to distribute the bulk of that to
shareholders as part of the company's previous stated plan. The
deal is also meant to make it easier for investors to value the
company by simplifying its corporate structure with a focus only on
paints and coatings.
The paints and coatings business faces a challenging environment
amid higher raw materials costs and foreign currency volatility. In
2017, Akzo's paints and coatings division posted at 2% on-the-year
gain in revenue but operating income fell about 11% to EUR825
million. Akzo manufactures paint brands such as Dulux and its
coatings include Interpon among others. Coatings are used to
prevent corrosion and improve durability across sectors including
automotive, electronics, mining and marine.
Write to Ben Dummett at ben.dummett@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 27, 2018 03:47 ET (07:47 GMT)
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