Cape Times

R2bn bid for PPC stake subject to AfriSam merger

- Bloomberg

PPC SAID yesterday Canadian insurer Fairfax Financial Holdings has made an offer to buy a stake in the company on condition that South Africa’s biggest cement maker agrees to a merger with smaller rival AfriSam.

Fairfax’s Africa unit is prepared to purchase R2 billion in shares priced at R5.75 each, PPC said. The deal is conditiona­l on a successful tie-up with AfriSam, which has been working with the Canadian company on the proposal.

Fairfax, which has its headquarte­rs in Toronto, will invest a further R4bn to pay off AfriSam debt to ensure that the deal goes ahead, PPC said.

The proposed merger ratio is based on 58 percent PPC and 42 percent AfriSam. PPC advised its shareholde­rs that it had received two other offers from trade buyers about a pan-African combinatio­n and that while it had yet to “fully consider” the Fairfax proposal, the offer of R5.75 “fundamenta­lly undervalue­s” the cement maker.

PPC shares jumped as much as 8.81 percent to close at R5.93 on the JSE yesterday, the highest since June 9.

The proposal is the latest attempt at a merger of PPC and AfriSam after more than twoand-a-half years of on-off negotiatio­ns. Both companies have been struggling with high debt levels, slower demand and the emergence of new competitor­s.

Talks previously broke down over how to structure the deal and who would have management control. The Fairfax offer would create a combined company “in a strong financial position”, AfriSam said.

“It is still too early to tell if the Fairfax offer makes sense,” UBS analyst Kwame Antwi said. “The market would need additional informatio­n. Most importantl­y, a value on AfriSam is needed.”

The African unit of Fairfax started a fund of about $500 million (R6.47 billion) for investment­s on the continent earlier this year.

Fairfax Africa last week A production line of AfriSam, 60 percent of which is owned by the Public Investment Corporatio­n, at their factory in Roodepoort, south-west of Johannesbu­rg. AfriSam has made a R2 billion bid for a 42 percent stake in PPC through Fairfax Financial Holdings.

completed the purchase of a 42 percent stake in Atlas Mara, the company co-founded by former Barclays chief executive Bob Diamond.

The parent company, headed by Prem Watsa, has almost $44bn in assets.

Merger talks between Johannesbu­rg-based PPC and AfriSam were first announced in December 2014, then called off a few months later before being

revived in February this year.

The initiation of fresh negotiatio­ns came after a turbulent year for PPC, which was forced to raise R4bn in a rights issue after S&P Global Ratings cut its debt to junk, triggering early redemption­s by bond holders.

The latest talks broke down after the companies couldn’t agree on how to value the deal, PPC chairperso­n Peter Nelson said.

Two people familiar with the matter said talks were also under way that might result in the writing down of R3bn of debt by the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC), Africa’s largest money manager.

The debt is held in financial instrument­s known as payment in kind notes, which typically allow a company to pay off interest with additional debt or equity. The cash injection from

Fairfax Africa would come days after previous talks about a combinatio­n failed and would help ensure that AfriSam does not default on its debt obligation­s, the people said.

Banks incl g FirstRand’s Rand Merchant Bank and Old Mutual’s Nedbank have already allowed AfriSam extensions on some of their loan repayments.

PIC owns about 60 percent of AfriSam.

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