Home NEWS India’s UltraTech to buy Kesoram’s cement business for $645 mln

India’s UltraTech to buy Kesoram’s cement business for $645 mln


A man cleans an Expert Testing Van of UltraTech Cement outside a cement store in Ahmedabad, India, July 28, 2022. REUTERS/Amit Dave/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights

BENGALURU, Nov 30 (Reuters) – India's UltraTech Cement has launched a 100-year-old company in Bengaluru (ULTC.NS) said on Thursday it will buy the cement business of Kesoram Industries (KSRM.NS) in an all-stock deal valued at 53.79 billion rupees ($645.41 million), in a move to add heft to its hold in the southern part of the country.

As a part of the deal, UltraTech will issue one share for every 52 shares of Kesoram and give UltraTech ownership of two integrated cement units in southern Indian states of Karnataka and Telangana.

The deal implies an offer price of 173.15 rupees per share, a 24.2% premium to Kesoram’s last close.

Market leader UltraTech is looking to boost its capacity ambitions in a highly competitive Indian cement sector, months after smaller peer Ambuja Cements (ABUJ.NS)owned by billionaire Gautam Adani, bought a majority stake in Sanghi Industries (SNGI.NS).

“UltraTech already has one of the best brownfield potential in industry. This deal, if it does go through, would be additive to that and help cement its capacity lead over others, even as other players with larger ambitions ramp up,” said Satyadeep Jain, research analyst at Ambit Capital.

The transaction, expected to be completed within 9-12 months, will provide the company “the opportunity to extend its footprint in the highly fragmented, competitive and fast growing Western and Southern markets in the country,” UltraTech said.

The proposed transaction will accelerate UltraTech’s path to achieving its stated goal of 200 million tons per annum (mtpa) cement capacity in India, it added. According to the company’s website, it currently has a consolidated capacity of 137.85 MTPA, with 23 integrated manufacturing units.

With this deal, Kesoram would be left with its smaller business segment – rayon, transparent paper and chemicals.

($1 = 83.3430 Indian rupees)

Reporting by Hritam Mukherjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Nivedita Bhattacharjee and Krishna Chandra Eluri

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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