Germany's ThyssenKruppto Sell Brazilian Steel Plant to Ternium
25 Ottobre 2016 - 5:50PM
Dow Jones News
FRANKFURT—German engineering giant Thyssenkrupp AG is in talks
with Ternium SA to sell its large steel plant in Brazil, a step
that would finish unwinding the German company's unsuccessful
investment push in the Americas, according to people familiar with
the matter.
The discussions are at an advanced stage and could be concluded
by year-end, those people said, adding there is no guarantee a deal
will take place. One significant potential stumbling block is the
fact that Ternium would likely want to pay less than the plant's
current book value of roughly €2 billion ($2.17 billion).
Any deal below that value would hit ThyssenKrupp's equity
cushion, which is already thin, according to analysts. It was
unclear whether other bidders are also eyeing the steel-slab plant,
which cost Thyssenkrupp roughly $6.8 billion to build when finished
in 2010. In 2013, Thyssenkrupp sold its U.S. steel plant to
ArcelorMittal and Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp. for $1.55
billion.
Thyssenkrupp said in an emailed statement that the company is
seeking to dispose of Companhia Siderú rgica do Atlâ ntico, or CSA,
adding it was a normal course of business to hold talks with
potential buyers.
A Ternium investor-relations official declined to speak with The
Wall Street Journal. The company's press office didn't immediately
respond to an email.
Ternium is a Luxembourg-based producer of flat and long steel
products with a strong presence in Latin America.
CSA has an annual production capacity of 5 million tons. The
plant swing to a €39 million operating profit in the third quarter
of the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, up from a €25 million loss in
the same quarter last year.
Selling the Brazilian steel unit would help ThyssenKrupp Chief
Executive Heinrich Hiesinger's effort to shift the company away
from steel operations.
Steel prices in Europe have come under pressure in recent years,
due to anemic steel demand growth and a sudden flood of steel
shipments from China, where shrinking demand led to a glut in steel
production. Large steel producers in Europe such as ThyssenKrupp,
ArcelorMittal and Tata Steel Ltd have responded to the supply
glut over the years by shutting loss-making production capacity,
laying off thousands of workers and/or disposing assets.
ThyssenKrupp, whose roots trace back more than 200 years and at
some point gained notoriety for its weapons including the giant
World War I-era howitzer known as Big Bertha, has also said it is
in talks to transfer its European steel operations into a joint
venture with Tata Steel Ltd.
The talks with Tata appeared to have been cast into doubt on
Monday, however, when India-based conglomerate Tata Group, the
founder and owner of Tata Steel, ousted its group chairman Cyrus
Mistry in a surprise move.
Mr. Mistry, also chairman of Tata Steel, was a key supporter of
talks to combine Tata's remaining European steel operations with
those of ThyssenKrupp. Analysts at Kepler Chevreux said it was
still too early to draw conclusions but "we think the risks for a
JV between Tata Steel Europe and Thyssenkrupp Steel Europe have
increased."
They added the joint venture might be delayed by at least six
months "at the very least" given growing risk of resistance to the
deal from Thyssen's union and works council.
Additionally, the shape such a joint venture would take is
currently also unclear. While ThyssenKrupp's management prefers to
tie-up its German steel plants with Tata's large mill in the Dutch
city of Ijmuiden, Tata appears willing to include its U.K. plant
called Port Talbot into the joint venture, people familiar with the
matter said.
That could be an unattractive alternative for ThyssenKrupp
because Port Talbot has suffered hefty losses over the years and
has substantial pension liabilities.
Write to Eyk Henning at eyk.henning@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 25, 2016 11:35 ET (15:35 GMT)
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