Business Standard

DP World mulls acquisitio­ns in bulk & liquid businesses

- ADITI DIVEKAR

DP World, a pioneer in private container terminal in India, is evaluating acquisitio­n opportunit­ies in the bulk and liquid businesses, and is expected to make an announceme­nt by December.

“Our teams are currently working towards a plan and we will look at all opportunit­ies that are available,” Anil Singh, senior vice-president and managing director, Indian subcontine­nt, told Business Standard.

The company has earmarked $1 billion towards investment in India, which will be employed in the growing logistics sector along with extended core businesses such as bulk and liquid.

DP World handled close to 30 per cent of India’s container trade and also has the largest portfolio of investment in this segment. It has largely grown across ports in Gujarat, Maharashtr­a, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh. It is also developing Kulpi facility in West Bengal.

“We are aware that they (DP World) are in the market to evaluate bulk and liquid opportunit­ies,” said an official in one Mumbai-based consultanc­y, but he did not divulge details.

Though DP World did not reveal their revenue figures for India business, the company said it has ambitious growth plans in bulk, liquid and logistics over the next two years through which it plans to scale up its revenues significan­tly.

“This is the best time to make acquisitio­ns since asset prices are low. For companies like ours which are financiall­y strong, this is the best opportunit­y for us to grow inorganica­lly and we will use this opportunit­y. We have already grown organicall­y in the last 20 years but going ahead for a quantum leap, we need to go the inorganic way,” Singh said.

Industry officials were of the view, that DP World, in the past, has been less aggressive in its inorganic growth route plans in India.

Though DP World is looking to foray into the bulk and liquid ports business in the country, the company is not completely closed for any acquisitio­ns in the container segment, where it still sees growth pockets despite not so strong capacity utilisatio­n levels.

“We have enough capacity in container division, but there are certain regions like Kolkata where there is scope for container business to grow, as there is a shortage. We are open to looking at such pockets as well,” said Singh.

Dubai-based DP World is part of its entire global operations that comprises regions such as Asia Pacific, Australia, America, West Asia, Europe and Africa. Container handling is the company’s core business and generates more than three quarters of its revenue. In 2016, DP World handled around 64 million TEU (twenty-foot equivalent units) across its entire portfolio.

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