05 May 2017
US: The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has approved Boral’s proposed acquisition of Headwaters. Boral expects that the transaction will be completed within two business days. The transaction is worth US$2.6bn. Following the purchase Boral USA and Headwaters will form a new division to be named Boral North America.
“We have been eagerly awaiting the approval from US regulators to allow us to complete the acquisition and to deliver on our strategy. In the meantime, we have continued to develop our integration plans and we are confident in our ability to deliver on the synergy targets we established when the transaction was announced,” said Boral’s chief executive officer and managing director Mike Kane. He added that Boral North America will focus on building products and fly ash.
India: Jaiprakash Associates has missed interest payments on a non-convertible debentures (NCD) for more than three months. It reported similar defaults on NCDs in April 2017. The indebted cement producer is selling integrated cement plants with a production capacity of 17.2Mt/yr and grinding plants with a capacity of 4Mt/yr to UltraTech Cement.
India: The Enforcement Directorate (ED) has filed a prosecution complaint against Penna Cement for alleged irregularities related to the allocation of land and the granting of a mining lease. The agency has also named the deceased YSR Congress chief Y S Jaganmohan Reddy, V Vijaysai Reddy, Penna Group chairman Putta Pratap Reddy and Pioneer Holdings in the case, according to the Hans India newspaper. The complaint accuses the former Andhra Pradesh state government, run by Reddy, of allocating 231 acres in Yadiki mandal of Anantapur district to Penna Cements for setting up a cement plant and officials for allowing the allocation in violation of land acquisition rules.
The ED’s complaint also says that the government at the time refused mining leases to UltraTech Cement, granted a prospecting lease to Penna Cement and was complicit in other irregularities. In return for these actions the ED alleges that Penna Group invested US$10.6m in companies owned by Reddy, in violation of money laundering regulations. Previously, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) filed charges against Penna Cement, Raghuram Cements and India Cements for favours they allegedly received from the Andhra Pradesh state government in 2008 and 2009.