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White Rabbit candy produced by Bright Food Group on display in a supermarket. The Shanghai-based company plans to buy Australian CSR's sugar business. [Agencies] |
Bright Food Group Co, the biggest food company in Shanghai, offered as much as A$1.5 billion ($1.4 billion) cash for Australia-based CSR Ltd's sugar unit to gain raw materials after global prices more than doubled in the past year.
CSR shares rose to their highest level in more than two years in Sydney trading after Bright disclosed its bid in a statement yesterday. The Shanghai-based company's offer is "merely an expression of interest" and isn't capable of acceptance, CSR said in a stock exchange filing.
The State-owned company, with businesses spanning from yogurt and ice cream to meats, would gain mills that account for about 4 percent of the global raw sugar trade. CSR, Australia's second-largest maker of building materials has been seeking to sell the unit to take advantage of a surge in sugar prices prompted by a global production shortfall.
"It is a chance for the Chinese conglomerate to buy a large global player in a soft commodity that has got some very favorable longer-term dynamics," Paterson Securities Ltd analyst Ben Kakoschke said by phone from Melbourne. CSR is large on a global scale and is relatively cost-efficient.
CSR rose 4.3 percent to A$2.05 at close of the exchange in Sydney trading. The stock earlier rose as much as 8.4 percent to A$2.13, the highest since November 2008.
The Shanghai Municipal Government, Bright's biggest shareholder, wants to build the company to encompass dairy, confectionery and beverage businesses, Liu Ran, an analyst at Central China Securities Holdings Co, said yesterday by phone from Shanghai.
Volatile prices
CSR's sugar unit may help "complete the whole group's production chain", Liu said. Still, she said sugar prices are volatile and it may not be a good time to buy sugar-producing assets.
Demand for sugar in China, the world's second-largest consumer behind India, may exceed production by 3.3 million tons in 2009-2010 after drought and cold weather cut yields, according to the Guangxi Bulk Sugar Exchange Center.
The Chinese company is keen to invest in the Australian food industry, particularly sugar, Vice-President Ge Junjie said in the statement. The proposed acquisition was also in line with plans to build "resource-related businesses" including dairy, wine and nutrition products, Ge said.
Enterprise value
As part of its sugar restructuring, CSR plans to buy a 25 percent stake in a refining venture from partner Mackay Sugar Ltd. Excluding that holding, CSR's sugar unit has an enterprise value of A$1.6 billion, assuming a long-term sugar price of 17 cents a pound, Paterson's Kakoschke said.
CSR is considering options for the separation of the sugar unit, saying it will look at any proposal it gets. CSR last year said it planned to spin off the unit from its aluminum and building material operations by March 31.
The division had earnings before interest and tax of A$83.7 million in the year ended March 31, or 26 percent of total company EBIT of A$320.1 million. Revenue from the business was A$1.4 billion, 40 percent of the total of A$3.5 billion.