Bangkok Post

Saint-Gobain agrees to sell unit to Apollo

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PARIS: Private equity firm Apollo Global Management LLC has won the bidding for Cie. de Saint-Gobain SA’s glass-packaging unit Verallia with an offer valuing the business at €2.95 billion ($3.27 billion), the French building materials group said yesterday.

Saint-Gobain said it had entered exclusive talks with Apollo to close the deal. Apollo saw off four other bidders — the Portuguese industrial group Ba Vidro SA and three other funds, Blackstone Group LP, CVC Capital Partners, and Ardian.

Verallia, which manufactur­es glass bottles and jars and is the main supplier of bottles for France’s champagne and cognac industries, generated €2.39 billion in sales and €230 million in operating income last year. It has 47 plants in 13 countries and employs nearly 10,000 people.

Finance director Laurent Guillot said net proceeds of €2.5 billion would go towards reducing Saint-Gobain’s debt after tax, payments to minorities and worker pension costs.

He said the sale price represente­d an earnings multiple of 7.4 times EBITDA and 12.8 times EBIT.

Separately, Apollo is in talks to sell a minority stake in the group to France’s state-backed investment fund, Bpifrance, after Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron earlier this year promised the company’s 2,200 French workers he would look after them.

“Saint-Gobain chose Apollo for the quality of its offer and its support for the industrial project and for Verallia’s employees,” the company said in a statement.

Apollo, which is based in New York, has experience in France including recent investment­s in debt-laden aircraft equipment maker Groupe Latecoere.

Saint-Gobain, which is selling Verallia to focus on its main business of constructi­on and building materials, earlier tried unsuccessf­ully to float the unit and sold the North American part of Verallia in April last year.

The company put the remains of Verallia up for sale in October, at the same time as it announced plans to buy control of Swiss chemicals firm Sika AG, a deal which has run into strong opposition.

It expects the Verallia deal to close by the end of the year once regulatory clearances, including one required by the European Commission, are obtained .

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