Displaying items by tag: Jaypee Group
CRH terminates Jaypee acquisition
09 October 2012Ireland/India: International building materials group CRH has said that negotiations with Jaypee Cement Corporation have been terminated because the parties were unable to agree terms.
On 7 August 2012 CRH announced that it had entered into talks with Jaypee regarding the possible purchase by CRH of an equity stake in Jaypee's Gujarat cement business. The operations in Gujurat consisted of clinker plants with a total capacity of 3.6Mt/yr. There are also two cement grinding plants with a total capacity of 2.8Mt/yr.
How much is an Indian cement plant worth?
08 August 2012Anyone need a spare cement plant? If so then it looks like India is the place to head to this week.
First, Italcementi denied that it was in talks with Jaiprakash Associates to buy one of their Jaypee Cement plants. Then, after much speculation, CRH announced publicly that it had entered negotiations to purchase an equity stake in Jaypee's entire cement business. In addition the Indian government has also revived a plan to sell six Cement Corporation of India (CCI) factories that have been closed for almost 10 years.
All of this raises a question: how much are Indian cement plants actually worth?
According to one source, Italcementi was thought to be offering US$100/t (installed capacity) in the bid it supposedly made but has denied making. Jaypee 'wanted' US$150/t. However analyst commentary with the CRH announcement suggested that Jaypee's asking price was too high! This is hardly surprising. Back in June 2012 when Jaiprakash announced that it was selling its plants it was reported that Holcim was offering up to US$160/t. Alongside the CCI story an analyst was quoted as putting the cost of Indian cement production capacity at US$110/t-US$120/t. Yet these plants have been shut for a decade.
Unlike in Europe, Indian cement industry profits have been rising in double digits in recent years. However, input costs like energy and transport are rising and they are starting to hit margins listed in quarterly reports. Serious additional costs have also arisen from the anti-cartel fines issued by the Competition Commission of India. Throw in questions on infrastructure raised by last week's nationwide power-cuts and Italcementi's (non)decision to stick to US$100/t seems prescient.
Unlike Italcementi however CRH has money to spend. Back in June 2012 it was reported that the company had Euro1.5bn to invest. With Euro250m gone in the first half of 2012 on so-called 'bolt-on' acquisitions that still leaves plenty in the pot to pick up the CCI plants. Now that would be a surprise.
CRH seeks stake in Indian cement maker Jaypee
08 August 2012Ireland/India: International building materials group CRH has confirmed its entry into negotiations to buy an equity stake in Indian producer Jaypee Cement Corporation. Jaypee Cement owns three cement facilities in the Indian state of Gujurat, in the west of the country, and another in Andhra Pradesh, in the south-east.
CRH said in a statement that the operations in Gujurat consist of clinker plants with a total capacity of 3.6Mt/yr. There are also two cement grinding plants with a total capacity of 2.8Mt/yr. Jaypee Cement is India's third-largest cement maker.
"The completion of any transaction would be subject to satisfactory due diligence, the approval of the respective boards of directors and the granting of regulatory approval," said CRH.
CRH chief executive Myles Lee said at the group's AGM in May 2012 that the company was focused on opportunities in China and India in order to drive long-term growth. CRH has spent close to Euro250m on bolt-on acquisitions in the first half of 2012. This included a further equity injection into its China associate Yatai Building Materials. CRH first entered the Indian market in 2008 through a joint venture with My Home Industries, a cement maker in Andhra Pradesh.
Jaypee under the hammer
18 June 2012India: India's biggest cement producer, Jaiprakash Associates, says that it is planning to sell its cement units in Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh as a part of its divestment plan. In a move that is very similar to those of debt-ridden European and North American cement producers, local media has reported that Jaiprakash has been in talks with at least two different investors, including domestic group Aditya Birla and Lafarge from France. It is looking to sell its 'Jaypee Cement' unit plants, which are already run as a separate company.
Birla and Lafarge have finished their first round of talks with Jaypee. Final bids will be completed in two months. Jaypee wants to exit the cement production business in order to focus on its core activities.
Earlier, it was also reported that Switzerland's multinational Holcim Ltd. was prepared to spend up to US$1.6bn on the three plants, which have a joint capacity of 9.8Mt/yr.