China Daily

Zoomlion offers $ 3.2 billion for US heavy machinery maker

- By YANG ZIMAN and FENG ZHIWEI in Changsha Wen Zhengxin contribute­d to this story. Contact the writers at yang-ziman@chinadaily.com.cn and fengzhiwei@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s Zoomlion Heavy Industry Science & Technology Co confirmed on Wednesday an unsolicite­d takeover bid for Terex Corp, the US crane and constructi­on machinery maker.

The deal will be vital to Zoomlion’s transforma­tion and the implementa­tion of the company’s global strategy, and it will help increase Zoomlion’s revenue and profits.

According to a Terex statement, Zoomlion has offered $ 30 per share for the company, valuing it at $ 3.2 billion.

The offer is twice Terex’s stock price on Monday, which closed at $ 15.01 per share in New York. The shares surged 37 percent on Tuesday to $ 20.5, pushing its market capitaliza­tion to $ 2.2 billion.

The Terex board said it is carefully reviewing the Zoomlion proposal to determine what course of action is in the best interests of its shareholde­rs.

Before the Zoomlion offer, Terex had agreed to merge with Finland equipment manufactur­er Konecranes to create a crane and materials handling supplier with a combined $ 10 billion in sales. After the merger, the company planned to change its name into Konecranes Terex Plc and move its base to Finland.

Founded in 1992, Zoomlion is mainly engaged in manufactur­ing high- tech equipment for the agricultur­al, building, energy, environmen­tal, and transport-engineerin­g sectors.

The first mainland constructi­on machinery company to be listed on both the Shanghai and Hong Kong stock exchanges, Zoomlion has

It needs to learn from developed countries in terms of technology and expertise.” Chen Chaofan, economics professor with the School of Economics and Resource Management at Beijing Normal University

manufactur­ing bases in Italy, Germany, India and Brazil.

China’s equipment manufactur­ing industry was hit hard by China’s economic slowdown last year. During the first half of the year, the 18 major listed constructi­on machinery firms reported combined operationa­l revenue of 50 billion yuan ($ 7.58 billion), a 29.31 percent fall on the same period in 2014.

“China’s equipment manufactur­ing sector is in the mid- to downstream of the global production chain,” said Chen Chaofan, an economics professor with the School of Economics and Resource Management at Beijing Normal University.

“It needs to learn from developed countries in terms of technology and expertise and overseas purchase is a good way to strengthen production capacity,” Chen said.

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