Toronto Star

Goodyear agrees to buy Cooper Tire for about $2.8B

- CÉCILE DAURAT AND KEITH NAUGHTON

Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. agreed to buy Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. for about $2.8 billion (U.S.), strengthen­ing its position as No. 1 in the U.S. market and almost doubling its presence in China, where auto sales are surging again.

Cooper shareholde­rs will receive $41.75 a share in cash and 0.907 shares of Goodyear, or about $54.36 a share in total, according to a statement Monday.

That’s 24 per cent above Cooper’s closing price as of Feb. 19.

Goodyear shareholde­rs will own about 84 per cent of the combined tire maker. The companies anticipate savings of about $165 million over two years from the merger.

The initial cost benefits will come from combining corporate functions, research and developmen­t and procuremen­t, the tire maker said. And while no manufactur­ing jobs or plants are being eliminated initially, the companies said they see opportunit­ies to leverage their combined production system.

“As we develop business plans, we’ll start to take a look at what opportunit­ies, including revenue growth and including how to better leverage the combined manufactur­ing footprint, we might be able to get,” Richard J. Kramer, Goodyear’s chairman and chief executive officer, said on a call with analysts on Monday.

“We definitely feel like those opportunit­ies are going to be there.”

Goodyear Tire’s purchase is a win for both companies, KeyBanc analyst James Picariello wrote in a note. Picariello said the deal “represents the rare instance of a clear, great deal for both parties.”

With Cooper, founded in 1914, Goodyear gains the fifth-largest tire manufactur­er in North America by revenue, with about 10,000 employees worldwide. In China, Akron, Ohio-based Goodyear will gain better access to local manufactur­ers and create broader distributi­on for Cooper replacemen­t tires.

The tire industry is recovering from the pandemic slump. Last week French tire maker Michelin predicted business will return to pre-pandemic levels in the second half of 2022, with chief executive officer Florent Menegaux saying the company needs to rebuild inventorie­s after demand snapped back more strongly than expected late last year.

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