Canadian Manufacturing

ChemChina offers US$8.8B to buy tire maker Pirelli

by Joe McDonald, The Associated Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Financing Manufacturing Operations Sales & Marketing Automotive Mining & Resources


Chinese companies are stepping up acquisitions abroad as they diversify beyond their own economy

BEIJING—China’s biggest state-owned chemical company announced plans to acquire Italian tire manufacturer Pirelli, adding to a string of high-profile Chinese corporate purchases in Europe.

ChemChina said it is buying 26.2 per cent stake in Pirelli Tyre S.p.A. from its biggest shareholder, Camfin S.p.A., which is controlled by the family of Pirelli chairman Marco Tronchetti Provera. The company said it would offer to buy the remaining outstanding shares.

If completed the deal would value Pirelli at $8.8 billion, according to financial information provider Dealogic.

Flush with cash from their country’s boom, Chinese companies are stepping up acquisitions abroad as they diversify beyond their own economy, where growth is slowing.

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Europe is seen as an attractive market for acquisitions due to the relative weakness of the euro right now and what Chinese companies see as less political resistance to large deals there than they might face in the United States.

Chemchina, also known as China National Chemical Corp., is one of China’s biggest industrial companies, with businesses in petrochemicals, oil processing, agricultural chemicals, rubber products and chemical equipment.

The Beijing-based company, which has its own tire manufacturing operation, said it would support the growth and expansion of Pirelli, the world’s fifth-largest tire supplier.

The deal reflects ChemChina’s unusual status as a state-owned Chinese company that has made ambitious acquisitions abroad outside the finance and natural resources industries.

The acquisition of Pirelli, if completed, would be one of China’s biggest to date in Europe.

So far this year, Chinese companies have announced 27 acquisitions in Europe totalling $12 billion, more than half of last year’s total of $23.7 billion, according to Dealogic.

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