ARM Cement will be seeking to turn a corner this year after a tumultuous 2018 that saw the company placed under administration.
The
Nairobi Securities Exchange-listed firm is expected to be sold to the
highest bidder in an auction that is already under way.
ARM’s
administrators PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) have received several
initial bids including from Nigeria’s Dangote Cement and Oman’s Raysut
–which placed a Sh10.2 billion offer to acquire the debt-laden company
.
.
According to the transaction timetable, binding offers are
expected by the end of this month. ARM’s creditors will thereafter
review the terms of the best offer, negotiate with the investor and
complete the transaction.
It is not clear what stake
the current ARM shareholders will be left with after the buyout is
completed. What impact the transaction will have on an earlier move to
sell the company’s non-cement business for Sh1.6 billion to Swiss firm
Omya and ARM’s former chief executive Pradeep Paunrana is also unknown.
PwC declined to comment on these issues.
“Taking into
account the confidentiality obligations that we have with various
bidders, and the commercially sensitive nature of the bidding
information we will not be in a position to provide the specific details
requested,” the administrators said.
“At this stage
all you should note is that the administrators are exploring a range of
options with respect to ARM Cement in order to deliver a transaction
that achieves the objectives of all stakeholders. We will engage
relevant stakeholders in due course as the process continues.”
ARM
remains suspended from trading on the Nairobi bourse where its stock
last changed hands at a price of Sh5.5 or a market capitalisation of
Sh5.3 billion.
Raysut’s Sh10.2 billion offer –the only bid announced publicly—
is enough to fully compensate secured creditors who are owed a total of
Sh7.2 billion.
Unsecured creditors, who are claiming
Sh6.7 billion, risk taking a significant haircut should the company be
sold at the price proposed by Raysut.
Shareholders like
UK sovereign wealth fund CDC Group and Mr Paunrana, on the other hand,
are staring at major losses as little cash is likely to spill over to
them.
The interest in ARM comes after the
administrators established that the company has a negative equity of
Sh2.4 billion, meaning that current shareholders will suffer a major
dilution if a takeover deal is concluded.
PwC says the
top priority is to keep ARM operational for the benefit of various
stakeholders including employees and lenders which it owes some Sh14
billion.
The acquisition of ARM will give the
successful bidder an instant presence in the local and regional cement
market, with a need to spend more than Sh2 billion to upgrade the
company’s factories.
ARM’s operations in Kenya include a clinker and cement grinding plant in Kaloleni and a cement grinding plant at Athi River.
The company also manufactures, imports and sells cement in Rwanda through its wholly owned subsidiary Kigali Cement Company.
In Tanzania, ARM runs limestone, clinker and cement plants through its subsidiaries Maweni Limestone Limited and ARM Tanzania.
Raysut
says the cement manufacturer will fit well into its existing trading
with East African countries. The Omani firm already supplies about
300,000 tonnes of clinker to Kenya and Tanzania alone in one quarter
from its home plant at Salalah.
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