Arab Times

Jianxin is China’s most aggressive dealmaker

Tycoon behind Syngenta bid

- (AP)

BEIJING, March 27, (AP): The tycoon who is offering $43 billion for Swiss agrochemic­als giant Syngenta keeps a low profile, but is China’s most aggressive dealmaker.

Ren Jianxin, chairman of stateowned ChemChina, is behind most of China’s big foreign acquisitio­ns, from Italian tire brand Pirelli to Norwegian chemical supplier Elkem and KraussMaff­ei, a German industrial machinery maker.

Since 2010, Ren has splashed out an eye-popping $63.9 billion on foreign assets, some 60 percent more than the No 2 Chinese buyer, according to Dealogic, a financial data provider.

It is unusually ambitious, but Ren is an unusual figure -- a private entreprene­ur who built an empire by gobbling up more than 100 state-owned enterprise­s.

ChemChina, also known as China National Chemical Corp., already is one of China’s biggest companies, with $45 billion in 2015 revenue. Its 140,000 employees include 48,000 abroad in 140 countries.

Its acquisitio­ns reflect the appetite of cash-rich but young Chinese companies for foreign technology and brands. Some want to sharpen their competitiv­e edge at home. Others want to get into more profitable global markets as Chinese economic growth slows.

Chinese acquisitio­ns include Swedish automaker Volvo, French tourism company Club Med and the American cinema chain AMC.

Ren, 58, started out by founding a maker of solvents, Bluestar Co, with seven employees in 1984 in the northweste­rn city of Lanzhou, far from China’s eastern industrial heartland. The Pirelli website calls him “the pioneer of China’s modern cleaning industry.”

Unlike other state industry managers who are career bureaucrat­s, Ren can draw on that experience to talk to foreign executives, said Andre Loesekrug-Pietri, chairman of A Capital, a private equity fund in Beijing. He said Ren also has recruited a handful of Western executives, bringing in knowledge of foreign business cultures.

At a news conference with Syngenta’s president in February, Ren “looked like an investment banker. He talked to reporters. That makes a difference,” said Loesekrug-Pietri. “They realize that today, money alone does not buy you love. It’s the way you present your strategy that is key.”

In the mid-’90s, Ren began taking control of a string of small government chemical producers. The state retained ownership while Ren was given management powers as the Communist Party tried to revive money-losing industries. According to news reports, he avoided layoffs by transferri­ng idle employees to noodle restaurant­s owned by his company.

In 2004, the party bestowed on Bluestar’s patchwork empire the elite status of a national-level state-owned enterprise. Today, it is one of 106 companies controlled directly by the Cabinet, alongside PetroChina Ltd. and China Mobile Ltd.

In another pioneering move, ChemChina sold 20 percent of a subsidiary, China National Bluestar Group, to US private equity fund Blackstone Group for $600 million in 2007. The company said it was the first direct foreign investment in a Chinese state-owned enterprise.

Ren lacks the fame of e-commerce pioneer Jack Ma of Alibaba Group or of Wang Jianlin, the Wanda Group chairman who agreed in January to pay $3.5 billion for Hollywood film studio Legendary Entertainm­ent.

Last month, Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post newspaper called Ren the “mystery man” behind ChemChina. He “may be the most important dealmaker you’ve never heard of,” the newspaper said.

Abroad, Ren’s buying spree began in 2006 with Adisseo, a French maker of food additives, and Qenos, an Australian supplier of polyethyle­ne. ChemChina bought France’s Rhodia Global Silicone the next year, becoming the No 3 producer of organic silicon.

In 2011, China National Bluestar Group paid $2 billion for Elkem, a maker of silicon and carbon parts.

 ??  ?? In this file photo, Ren Jianxin, chairman of ChemChina (China National Chemical Corporatio­n), speaks during an annual press conference of agrochemic­al company Syngenta in Basel, Switzer
land.
In this file photo, Ren Jianxin, chairman of ChemChina (China National Chemical Corporatio­n), speaks during an annual press conference of agrochemic­al company Syngenta in Basel, Switzer land.

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