Total Pageviews

Asia’s Richest Person Expands Reach Into Europe

HONG KONG-A consortium of companies owned by Li Ka-shing, the richest person in Asia, said Monday that it would pay more than $1 billion to acquire the Dutch waste management firm AVR from its private equity owners.

Mr. Li’s companies have been seeking to expand their already considerable global portfolio of investments in utilities and infrastructure, which include electricity plants in Australia and natural gas networks in Britain.

Under the 943.7 million euro, or $1.26 billion, deal, four Li firms will team up to acquire AVR, which incinerates waste and converts it into energy, from a Dutch company jointly owned by the private equity firms Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and CVC Capital Partners.

Cheung Kong Infrastructure and Cheung Kong Holdings, two Hong Kong-listed companies controlled by Mr. Li and his family, each have a 35 percent stake in the purchasing consortium. Power Assets Holdings, which provides electricity to Hong Kong Island on a monopoly basis, will have a 20 percent stake; the privately run Li Ka Shing Foundation will take up the remaining 10 percent stake.

Mr. Li, 85, is ranked by Forbes as the eighth richest person in the world, with a net worth estimated at $31 billion as of March.

In a joint announcement Monday, the Li companies said AVR represented a ‘‘compelling long-term investment opportunity for the consortium’’ and ‘‘an attractive opportunity for infrastructure investors with the potential for appropriate growth opportunities.’’

During the buyout boom that preceded the global financial crisis, K.K.R. and CVC teamed up in 2006 to acquire AVR from the municipal government of Rotterdam in a deal that valued the waste management firm at 1.4 billion euros, including debt.

in 2007, K.K.R. and CVC acquired the Dutch waste collection firm Van Gansewinkel Groep for an undisclosed sum and merged it with AVR.

But the merged Van Gansewinkel Groep has struggled financially in recent years. Despite its revenue rising 4.7 percent to 1.25 billion euros last year, the company’s net losses widened to 65 million euros from a 25 million euro loss in 2011.

In a statement Monday, Cees van Gent, chief executive of Van Gansewinkel Groep, described the spinoff of AVR as a ‘‘new important step forward.’’

‘‘With this transaction, we significantly strengthen our financial position,’’ he said, adding that Van Gansewinkel would remain focused on waste collection and recycling after the deal.

For its part, AVR remains a profitable business. It has 434 employees and reported revenue of 256 million euros last year, according to Van Gansewinkel.

Stock exchange filings made Monday by the Li companies said AVR and its subsidiaries reported net profit of 42.3 million euros last year, more than double the profit of 20.7 million euros in 2011.

The deal remains subject to approval from the Dutch works council and European antitrust regulators and is expected to close during the July-to-September quarter, the companies said.

The AVR acquisition marks the second time in the past year that the same four Li companies have teamed up to acquire a European utility. Last July, the four companies announced a deal worth £645 million, or $1 billion at the exchange rates of the time, to acquire MGN Gas Networks, a British company doing business as Wales & West Utilities, that distributes natural gas throughout Wales and southwest England.

Shares in the Li companies rose after the deal was announced. At noon in Hong Kong, Cheung Kong’s stock had risen 3.3 percent, Cheung Kong Infrastructure was up 3.1 percent, and Power Assets had risen 2.4 percent. The broader Hang Seng index was up 1.3 percent.



Cinven to Buy CeramTec, a Ceramics Maker, for $2 Billion

LONDON - The European private equity firm Cinven agreed on Sunday to buy the ceramics business CeramTec from Rockwood Holdings for 1.49 billion euros, or $1.98 billion.

Rockwood, based in Princeton, New Jersey, said the sale was part of its plan to focus more as a specialty chemical company, adding that it would use the proceeds to pay down debt and return capital to shareholders.

CeramTec, based in Germany, manufactures high performance ceramics used in the automotive and industrial sectors, and generated revenue of 425 million euros last year, according to a company statement.

Cinven said it planned to use CeramTec’s existing 18 facilities around the world to expand into new markets.

“We are keen to support the company’s growth outside its core European markets, specifically in North America and Asia,” Bruno Schick, a partner at Cinven, said in a statement.

The deal represents the fourth acquisition from Cinven’s latest 5.3-billion-euro fund. The European private equity firm’s newly-raised capital also has been in invested in companies in Turkey, France, and Britain.

The deal for CeramTec is expected to close in the third quarter of the year.

Lazard and the law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher advised Rockwood on the deal.



Weyerhaeuser Buys Timberlands and Weighs Divestiture of Its Homebuilding Unit

Weyerhaeuser said on Sunday that it plans to buy 645,000 acres of timberland for about $2.65 billion and added that it was weighing a sale or spinoff of its homebuilder unit.

It also announced the appointment of Doyle Simons as its new chief executive, replacing Dan Fulton, who will serve as executive vice chairman in August before retiring in October.

Weyerhaeuser is buying the acreage through its acquisition of Longview Timber from Brookfield Asset Management, gaining lands in Washington and Oregon. The deal will expand the company’s holdings in the Pacific Northwest by 33 percent, to 2.6 million acres, and boost its overall holdings in the United States to 6.6 million acres.

As part of the deal, Weyerhaeuser will raise its quarterly dividend to 22 cents a share, from 20 cents a share.

Meanwhile, Weyerhaeuser plans to explore a potential sale of its homebuilding division, Weyerhaeuser Real Estate Company. The business, which includes Pardee Homes, is one of the country’s biggest builders of homes in the country.

“The board of directors and management team are committed to further enhancing value for all Weyerhaeuser shareholders,” Mr. Fulton said in a statement. “Given the improving fundamentals of the housing market, we believe now is a prudent time to explore strategic alternatives for this business.”