
Displaying items by tag: Birla
India: Birla Corporation’s sales revenue has risen by 16% year-on-year to US$134m in the quarter that ended on 30 June 2016 from US$115m in the same period of 2015. Its net profit rose to US$14.1m from US$3.73m. Its cement sales revenue rose by 31% to US$125m from US$107m. The company’s cement sales volumes rose by 11% to 2.17Mt from 1.96Mt.
Shri Harsh V Lodha, chairman of the company, said that operating costs at its Chanderia and Satna cement plants could be reduced following efficiency drives, improving fuel mixes and lower fuel prices. Packaging costs have fallen following a reduction in the cost of polypropylene granules. The use of petcoke at the Chanderia and Satna plants has also helped to reduce costs.
India: The Calcutta High Court has dismissed two petitions by members of the Birla family intending to challenge the takeover of Reliance Infrastructure by Birla Corporation. Justice Jyotirmoy Bhattacharya held that the petitions were not maintainable stating that decisions taken by the directors could not be called into question by the probate court.
The challenge by the Birla family represents the latest move in a long-running legal battle between the family and accountant R S Lodha, father of the current chairman of Birla Corporation. The cement company announced in February 2016 that it was planning to buy Reliance Infrastructure for US$715m.
India: Members of the Birla family have challenged the take-over of the Reliance Infrastructure in the Calcutta High Court claiming that it was done without the consent of the family or the court. The move follows a prolonged legal battle in 2004 between the Birla family members and chartered accountant R S Lodha. Lodha claimed that M P Birla's widow Priyamvada had bequeathed the assets of the estate to him. The matter is still being contested legally.
Representatives for Birla Corporation defended the purchase saying that the funds were not being taken from the estate and that it was being done through internal accrual and other sources. They added that the US$715m take-over would be a 'sweet deal' as the assets of the Reliance Infrastructure cement company were new. The deal was announced in early February 2016.
India: Reliance Infrastructure has sold its cement business to Birla Corporation for US$709m to lower its debt. The transaction is subject to approval of the Competition Commission of India and other applicable regulatory approvals," the company said.
"Reliance Infrastructure today announced the signing of share purchase agreement with Birla Corporation Limited, the flagship Company of the M P Birla Group, in relation to 100% sale of its subsidiary RCCPL," the company said in a statement. It added that SBI Capital Markets acted as the financial advisors to Reliance Infrastructure for this transaction.
Reliance Infrastructure has an integrated cement production capacity of 5.08Mt/yr at Maihar, Madhya Pradesh and Kundanganj, Uttar Pradesh and a 0.5Mt/yr cement grinding unit at Butibori, Maharashtra. The deal was valued at US$140/t of cement production capacity.
LafargeHolcim confirms revised sale plan for Lafarge India
04 February 2016India: LafargeHolcim has confirmed that it is considering selling its subsidiary Lafarge India. The sale will require the approval of the Competition Commission of India (CCI) as an alternate remedy for the merger of the Group's legacy companies. Lafarge India has a cement production capacity of 11Mt/yr.
The announcement follows a regulatory filing by Birla Corporation stating that is considering taking legal action against LafargeHolcim for stopping a previous deal. However, LafargeHolcim has not said why it terminated the deal with Birla Corporation.
Originally LafargeHolcim was in discussion with Birla Corporation for the sale of the Jojobera and Sonadih cement plants in Eastern India that was previously announced. Both plants had a combined cement production capacity of 5.1Mt/yr. Due to the current regulatory issues relating to the transfer of mining rights captive and critical to the two plants, LafargeHolcim was obliged to submit an alternate remedy to the CCI to ensure compliance with the order.
LafargeHolcim now says that an 'alternate remedy' is under consideration by the CCI.
Birla Corporation to take legal action against Lafarge India
03 February 2016India: Birla Corporation said it will take legal action against Lafarge India over the firm's 'inability' to go ahead with the deal to sell its Jojobera and Sonadih cement plants. In August 2015 both firms signed an agreement, through which Birla Corporation was to acquire Jojobera and Sonadih cement businesses from Lafarge India for US$734m.
"Lafarge India has since informed its inability to proceed with the agreement. The company has since discussed the matter with its legal advisors and has decided not to accept its contention and is in the process of taking appropriate legal measures in consultation with lawyers," said Birla Corporation in a regulatory filing. The firm did not specify reasons behind Lafarge India expressing its inability to complete the deal.
Birla Corp was to acquire Lafarge India's cement business, which comprises an integrated cement unit at Sonadih, Chhattisgarh, a cement grinding unit at Jojobera, Jharkhand along with Concreto and PSC brands. The acquisition would have added an additional cement capacity of 5.15Mt/yr to Birla Corp and would have helped the firm consolidate its position in the eastern India cement market. The company has a total operational cement capacity of about 10Mt/yr with plants in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal.
Indian cement industry now on sale!
13 January 2016Last week we promised reasons to be cheerful for the cement industry. We only have one to offer this week but it's a good one. At present three Indian cement companies are on sale: Lafarge India, Reliance Cements and Jaiprakash Associates. If these sales complete then it represents an opportunity for the Indian cement industry to reorganise itself and stride forward when growth recovers.
Lafarge India upped its sales proposal to the Competition Commission of India (CCI) on 6 January 2016 to sell its entire 11Mt/yr portfolio. Originally as part of the LafargeHolcim merger agreements the CCI asked Lafarge to sell 5.2Mt/yr of production capacity in Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand in eastern India. However the deal was reliant on the original buyer, Birla Corporation, securing limestone mining rights. Birla failed to do so. Now Lafarge India has decided to sell everything instead. Naturally, following its Euro8bn spending spree in 2015 CRH has been linked to the sale by Indian media.
Then following press speculation Reliance Infrastructure confirmed to the Bombay Stock Exchange on 11 January 2016 that it was at an 'advanced stage of discussions with potential buyers for divesting the cement business of the company.' Reliance's cement arm, Reliance Cement, holds three cement plants in Maihar in Madhya Pradesh, Kundanganj in Uttar Pradesh and Butibori in Maharashtra with a total production capacity of 5.8Mt/yr. In addition to this, the company is also developing a 5Mt/yr cement plant at Wani in Maharashtra. The Reliance sale has been reported upon since early 2015. The difference this time is that Reliance responded to local press reports that it was about to sell to Birla Corporation or a couple of other private equity firms.
Finally, the third sale concerns Jaiprakash Associates' on-going attempts to sell its remaining cement assets to service its debts. Jaiprakash Associates cement subsidiary, Jaypee Cement, holds eight plants in India with a cement production capacity of 11Mt/yr. In addition it holds six cement grinding plants with a capacity of 10.7Mt/yr. Despite reported attempts to sell the entire division in one Jaypee has actually ended up selling its cement assets in a piecemeal fashion one or two at a time. The most recent sale being announced this week is to sell its Bhilai Jaypee Cement to Shree Cement. This follows other sales to HeidelbergCement and UltraTech in 2015.
None of these sales are new exactly but the combined production capacity of these plants comes to just under 28Mt/yr. This represents 9% of India's total national cement production capacity of 310Mt/yr. Any player somehow able to weasel their way into striking a deal for all of these plants would immediately become one of the country's biggest producers.
It would definitely be a case of buyer beware though. Credit agency ICRA recently reported that it expects that cement demand growth will be a 'modest' 4% in the 2015 - 2016 financial year before picking up in the following year. This follows poor growth in cement demand in the first half of 2015 and even declines in March and April 2015. ICRA also expected the country capacity utilisation to drop to 70% in the 2016 financial year, down from 77% in the 2012 financial year. That 7% drop in the utilisation is awfully close to the 9% of Indian national production capacity that the cement assets currently on sale from Lafarge India, Reliance Cement and Jaypee Cement. Unsurprisingly, the buyers of Indian cement assets have been picking and choosing their plants one-by-one so far.
Lafarge plans to exit India operations
06 January 2016India: Lafarge India has submitted a revised proposal to the Competition Commission of India (CCI) to sell its entire 11Mt/yr assets in India.
The decision comes after the company's plan to sell its 5.15Mt/yr cement capacity in Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand to Birla Corporation for US$749m ran into trouble. Investment bankers said that Birla Corporation was facing challenges in securing limestone mining rights for the two units.
In order to approve the LafargeHolcim merger in India, the CCI had asked Lafarge India to sell its 5.15Mt/yr of capacity in eastern India by 31 December 2015. In August 2015, Birla Corporation agreed to buy the proposed assets along with brands Concreto and PSC and mineral rights over adequate reserves of limestone. The deal was conditional on Birla Corp being able to secure mining rights that Lafarge had.
"Lafarge India has sought an extension of its deadline from the CCI to complete its divestment," said an unnamed investment banker. "Lafarge India has now put the entire company on the block, as the sale of the entire company will include transfer of mining rights."
Birla Corporation commissions cement blending unit in Uttar Pradesh
03 November 2015India: Birla Corporation has commissioned its 50,000t/yr cement blending unit in Raebareli, Uttar Pradesh. In August 2015 it agreed to acquire, either directly or through its wholly-owned subsidiary, Lafarge India's Jojobera and Sonadih cement businesses for US$763m.
UltraTech deal with Jaypee delayed by mine transfer legislation
01 September 2015India: UltraTech Cement is seeking clarification from the Indian government over the transfer of limestone reserves as part of its deal to buy two integrated cement plants in Madhya Pradesh from Jaypee Group, according to HT Media. A clause in the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act 2015 barring the transfer of mines that were not allotted through auctions is delaying mergers and acquisitions (M&As) in the mining sector.
According to a clause in the new Act, transfer of the mining licence is allowed only for mines that have been auctioned. Most of the operational limestone mines in India were allotted and not auctioned. The Act allows for these reserves to be auctioned in the future. However, legal experts are divided on whether this clause will apply retrospectively.
UltraTech agreed to buy Jaiprakash Associates' cement plant with a clinker capacity of 2.1Mt/yr and a cement grinding capacity of 2.6Mt/yr at Bela in Madhya Pradesh in December 2014. It then agreed to buy a second plant at Sidhi with a clinker capacity of 3.1Mt/yr and a cement grinding capacity of 2.3Mt/yr. The deal included access to the limestone reserves in Madhya Pradesh.
The new legislation is also expected to affect Lafarge's sale of its east Indian assets to Birla Corp.