Smiths wobble fortifies case for more surgery 21 Sep 2018 The $8 bln engineer reported its first sales growth in five years, but the shares fell due to a weaker-than-expected outlook. After rejecting a sale of its medical unit, CEO Andy Reynolds is pruning assets and investing. That may not be enough to close a steep valuation discount.
Saudi-Clariant chemical deal is murky concoction 18 Sep 2018 The Swiss group is setting up a joint venture with 25 pct shareholder Saudi Basic Industries. At the same time SABIC will contribute a new Clariant CEO and four board directors. Though the venture should make sense, the company’s governance becomes more complicated.
Chinese mega-merger should catalyze chemical M&A 1 Aug 2018 A changing of the guard at ChemChina suggests a Sinochem deal is getting closer. At more than $100 bln in annual revenue, the resulting giant would be on par with DowDuPont. Some forced sales may result, but Beijing's ambition will keep the focus squarely on more buying.
Indian buyer sows better outbound M&A seeds 23 Jul 2018 In the country’s biggest overseas deal in years, UPL will double in size acquiring Platform Specialty’s agrochemicals unit for $4.2 bln. Backing from TPG and ADIA help, and there’s no risky bridge loan. The Shroff family may outdo other local tycoons who have ventured abroad.
Aramco’s downstream diversion solves few problems 19 Jul 2018 Buying a stake in petrochemical maker SABIC would enable the Saudi oil giant to diversify its business. But it complicates the government’s plans to open state companies to private capital. And the holding is too small to pump up Aramco’s valuation in an initial public offering.
DSM extracts vigorous returns from healthy planet 20 Jun 2018 The Dutch company which once mined coal now makes food supplements and fibres. New targets suggest sustainable businesses can deliver high single-digit EBITDA growth. Though investors’ expectations are already high, up to 3 bln euros for acquisitions promises a further boost.
DSM has ingredients for long-term health 12 Apr 2018 Shares in the Dutch vitamin and chemicals group hit a record high after it reported strong first-quarter sales. A fire at German rival BASF’s plant cut supply, prompting a spike in vitamin E prices. A healthy underlying business shows the valuation boost needn’t be temporary.
Bayer investors get unwelcome antitrust present 10 Apr 2018 The German company has struck a deal with U.S. regulators to clear its $60 billion acquisition of seed group Monsanto, the Wall Street Journal reported. After EU approval in March, a two-year saga is almost over. Bayer’s sagging stock price means shareholders can hold the cheers.
Carlyle’s $12.6 bln Akzo deal has good chemistry 27 Mar 2018 The U.S. private equity group is buying a speciality chemical unit that the Dutch company put on the block after a failed PPG bid. Carlyle knows the industry and has slashed costs at Axalta. While there may be less scope for huge cuts this time, decent returns are still on offer.
DowDuPont stock lacks activist chemistry 14 Feb 2018 The $166 bln industrial group is exceeding revenue estimates and planned merger cost cuts. Crunching two companies together and splitting into three should be worth more, according to activist Dan Loeb last year. He has gone quiet – and investors seem to have forgotten the story.
Bull market lets activists see virtue in passivity 26 Jan 2018 Bill Ackman, who lost his fight with ADP, has taken a stake in Nike but isn’t pushing for change. Dan Loeb sat back as Honeywell’s new boss ignored his advice and beat his targets anyway. Even pushy hedge funds can be tempted to simply ride the waves when a rally lifts all boats.
Activists beat bearable retreat in Clariant feud 25 Jan 2018 White Tale has surprisingly sold its stake in the Swiss chemical maker to SABIC. That may be a recognition its bid to shake up the group would fail. Exiting now may leave some money on the table, but the hedge fund consortium has probably made a decent return.
BASF’s odd oil deal may create a valuable compound 8 Dec 2017 The 87 bln euro German chemicals firm agreed to merge its oil unit with Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman’s DEA. It’s a complex transaction, with a messy structure. Yet pooling the business will create savings and may eventually help BASF shed its huge conglomerate discount.
BASF oil exit belatedly admits flaws of diversity 27 Nov 2017 The chemicals giant may merge its oil and gas unit with DEA, owned by Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman, before an IPO. Cost savings of 1 bln euros partly make up for low oil prices. A broader lesson is that when companies try to span different industries, shareholders suffer.
Clariant and activist lack a positive reaction 24 Nov 2017 The Swiss chemical maker will devise a new strategy after its merger with rival Huntsman flopped. It rejected demands from White Tale to explore a breakup. Clariant cannot ignore its 20 pct shareholder, but the activist that scuppered the deal needs to propose as well as oppose.
Akzo’s no-deal still worse than a good deal 22 Nov 2017 The Dutch paint maker is temporarily solo after talks with U.S. peer Axalta foundered. That combination, good on paper, was challenged by the two companies’ uneven size and likely job cuts. Even so, Akzo’s future if it’s determined to remain single is unappealing.
Nippon Paint’s run at Axalta looks off-colour 22 Nov 2017 The Japanese group has lobbed in a cash bid for its U.S. rival, Reuters reports, ending the target's merger talks with Akzo Nobel. A deal valued at some $12 bln including debt, even assuming hefty savings, would destroy value. Fulfilling global ambitions may be costly for Nippon.
Akzo Nobel-Axalta merger is a hostage to history 8 Nov 2017 A proposed blend of the two paint makers could produce colourful cost savings. That must mean job losses – and Akzo is the less efficient. Yet the $23 bln Dutch group deflected a bid from PPG saying cuts were a no-go. It’s hard to see how it could do the requisite U-turn now.
Axalta is a chip in DowDuPont’s paintwork 2 Nov 2017 Activist Nelson Peltz once pilloried chemicals giant DuPont for selling its coatings business to private equity. He was right. Axalta is now weighing a merger with Akzo Nobel. With a bit more love, it might have given investors in what’s now DowDuPont a 29 percent annual return.
Axalta deal complicates Akzo’s juggling act 30 Oct 2017 Fresh from deflecting a takeover, the Dutch group is considering a merger of its paints unit with its U.S. rival. A combination makes sense. But new CEO Thierry Vanlancker is already grappling with weak results and a chemicals spinoff. That raises the risk of dropped balls.