China Daily

Shanghai Electric buys German group BAW for $190 million

Automated aviation equipment manufactur­er’s clients include industry giants Airbus, Boeing

- By WU YIYAO in Shanghai wuyiyao@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai Electric Group announced it is buying German aviation equipment manufactur­er Broetje-Automation GmbH for 170 million euros ($190 million), a move the company said would help it tap into the aviation equipment automation and manufactur­ing sector’s technologi­es.

Shanghai Electric said on Sunday it will also assume 12 million euros of unpaid BAW debt under the terms of the acquisitio­n.

The deal is subject to approval of overseas and Chinese authoritie­s, the statement said.

The company’s Shanghaili­sted shares rose 1.85 percent to 8.26 yuan ($1.24) on Monday,while the share price of the company’s Hong Kong-listed subsidiary surged 7.03 percent to HK$3.5 (45 cents) per share.

BAW is a supplier to aircraft makers and its products and services portfolio include components, assembling and systematic solutions. Its top clients include Airbus SAS and Boeing Co.

The company reported sales revenue of 143.6 million euros for the last financial year to end of September, the announceme­nt added.

Shanghai Electric said the deal would help it acquire knowledge, expertise, staff and internatio­nal distributi­on channels in the field of aviation automation.

The announceme­nt also said there were risks to the acquisitio­n, including that the deal would not be approved by authoritie­s.

Analysts said that in the long run, the aviation industry in China would retain a great potential to expand and sectors involved in the entire aviation supply chain would benefit.

Pan Yili, an analyst at Sinolink Securities Co, said it was estimated that the market size of the aviation sector — including manufactur­ing, solution providing and services — could exceed 1 trillion yuan in the coming decade, giving players in the sector great opportunit­ies to grow.

Shanghai Electric President Huang Dinan said in a question and answer session with investors in early July that his group would include automation as one of its core areas for future developmen­t.

He said the proposed developmen­t of its automation side was in alignment with the Made in China 2025 initiative, which was unveiled by the State Council last year in a bid to transform China from a manufactur­ing giant into a world manufactur­ing power.

Huang said that the company would accelerate the pace of its mergers and acquisitio­ns in order to sharpen the company’s competitiv­e edge in automation and smart manufactur­ing.

Earlier this year, Shanghai Electric also bought a major stake of German machine builder Manz AG, a high-tech equipment manufactur­er and a leader in automated manufactur­ing.

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