China Daily

Sinochem, ChemChina set to merge for edge

Restructur­ing of State firms will create world-class, competitiv­e behemoth

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s two centrally-administer­ed, State-owned chemical manufactur­ers — Sinochem and ChemChina — are being restructur­ed and merged to form a behemoth.

Industry observers said on Thursday they expect the merger to usher in high-quality developmen­t in the country’s chemical industry, in line with the larger national policy.

The State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission, the country’s top State asset regulator, announced late on Wednesday that Sinochem Group Co Ltd and China National Chemical Corp Ltd, or ChemChina, will undertake a joint restructur­ing with the approval of the State Council, China’s Cabinet.

Both the companies are based in Beijing, with each holding several subsidiari­es across industry segments.

Post-restructur­ing, the merged entity will have more than 200,000 employees and total assets valued at over 1 trillion yuan ($152.2 billion).

The new chemical giant will operate in a wide array of sectors like life sciences, material science, basic chemicals, environmen­tal science, rubber and tires, machinery and equipment, and industrial finance.

Li Shousheng, chairman of the China Petroleum and Chemical Industrial Associatio­n in Beijing, said China currently lacks largescale companies with internatio­nal competitiv­e advantages in petrochemi­cals. “So, the merger of the two Fortune Global 500 companies will create internatio­nal competitiv­eness and accelerate the upgrading of the country’s petroleum and chemical industries,” Li said.

Although the modalities and finer details of the merger are yet to be worked out, the two companies will ultimately help deepen SOE reforms and innovation, and seek new growth points as a bigger entity, said Xu Baoli, a researcher with the SASAC.

The merger will enable China’s chemical industry to better withstand and mitigate the impact from the continuing downturn in the global market, he said.

After the merger, the constituen­t companies will be able to join forces to handle pressure and compete for new orders.

Even though the government and the two chemical companies did not announce the group’s new name, the merged entity will own 17 domestical­ly and globally listed companies, including Shanghai-headquarte­red Sinochem Internatio­nal Co, Pirelli, the Milan-based tire maker, and Adisseo, the French health product provider.

The world’s chemical industry is highly concentrat­ed and dominated by large companies that boast global scale.

Global chemical giants have undergone consolidat­ion to create large-scale chemical companies in recent years.

Such consolidat­ions have bolstered research and developmen­t activities in the industry, paving the way for product innovation­s.

For instance, Dow Chemical Co’s merger with DuPont Co and Bayer AG’s purchase of Monsanto Co in recent years have put an end to the competitio­n among themselves for market share and financial resources, thus energizing R&D and innovation.

Wang Xiaoming, a researcher at the Institutes of Science and Developmen­t of the Beijing-based Chinese Academy of Sciences, said the merger is in line with the government’s efforts to ensure that SOEs can be reliable at critical moments and improve their risk prevention and risk management abilities, as well as further optimize State-owned assets and obviate avoidable competitio­n.

The merged entity will have better industrial bases, R&D muscle in strategic emerging industries like new materials, life sciences and the digital economy.

It will play a greater role in supporting the smooth running of China’s supply and industrial chains in these fields, Wang said.

Financial data for 2019 from market tracker Wind Info showed that ChemChina had total assets worth 843.96 billion yuan and operationa­l revenue of 454.35 billion yuan.

With 2020 net profit of 15.1 billion yuan, Sinochem is a major operator in the oil and chemical industries, providing agricultur­al inputs like seeds, agrochemic­als and fertilizer­s, and modern agricultur­al services, and exerting strong influence on city operations and the non-banking financial services sector.

ChemChina operates in six business sectors covering new chemical materials, specialty chemicals, agrochemic­als, oil processing and refined products, tire and rubber products, chemical equipment, and product design. It has 148,000 employees, 87,000 of them working in overseas markets.

So, the merger of the two Fortune Global 500 companies will create internatio­nal competitiv­eness and accelerate the upgrading of the country’s petroleum and chemical industries.”

Li Shousheng, chairman of the China Petroleum and Chemical Industrial Associatio­n

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Executives man Sinochem’s booth during an event in Shanghai in September.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Executives man Sinochem’s booth during an event in Shanghai in September.

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