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Jinan Iron and Steel Co Ltd (Jigang) will acquire Laiwu Steel Corporation (Laigang) through a share swap, paving the way for the backdoor listing of their controlling shareholder Shandong Iron and Steel Group Co Ltd (Shangang).
According to statements the two steelmakers filed to the Shanghai Stock Exchange Wednesday, each Laigang share, valued at 12.29 yuan ($1.80), will be swapped for 2.43 Jigang shares, valued at 5.05 yuan.
Jigang will issue additional 2.29 billion shares at 5.05 yuan per share in a bid to acquire 11.6 billion worth of assets of the parent companies of Jigang and Laigang, including 3 billion yuan in cash and other assets valued at 8.6 billion yuan.
A Jigang employee works in front of a furnace at the company's plant in Jinan, Shandong province. [China Daily] |
Jigang gained 8.35 percent closing at 5.71 yuan while Laigang dropped by 5.36 percent, closing at 12.37 yuan Wednesday.
After the transaction is completed, Laigang will be delisted and Jigang will be renamed after Shangang.
Shandong provincial government incorporated Shangang as a State-owned platform to consolidate the local steel industry in 2008. Shangang will take controlling stakes in Jigang and Laigang, both of which had suspended trading since Nov 9, 2009 until the Wednesday announcement of the merger.
Last September, Shangang acquired a 67 percent stake in privately owned Rizhao Iron and Steel. Restructuring of Rizhao is ongoing. Details of the deal were not disclosed but the statement said Shangang would inject its stake in Rizhao into its listed arm at the appropriate time.
Jigang and Laigang recorded losses of 875 million yuan and 598 million yuan respectively in the first half of 2009, while Rizhao earned 1.8 billion yuan profit in the same period.
The combined annual steel production capacity of Jigang, Laigang and Rizhao will be 38 million tons a year, making Shangang the third largest steel mill in China.
Analysts said this deal would facilitate the listing of Shangang as it endeavors to acquire local steelmakers to transform itself into a steel mill of national standing.
Zeng Hai, an analyst with Guolian Securities, said the consolidation would help Shangang expand production capacity, improve management structure, reduce costs, and strengthen competitiveness.
"Domestic demand for crude steel is expected to grow 10 percent or even higher this year," said the report.
Huang Shuyan, an analyst at HuaChuang Securities, said local governments are often the driving forces behind merger and acquisition deals in the steel sector.
Consolidation efforts have gathered speed since the central government issued a stimulus package for the steel industry in January 2009, and encouraged big mills to merge with rivals to create cohesive steel groups. The government also said it would strictly control steelmaking capacity as oversupply problems have weighed on prices and squeezed profit margins.
Last December, Hebei Iron and Steel Co Ltd was set up via the merger of three local steelmakers in Hebei province.
Anshan Iron & Steel Group is also in talks to take over Anyang Iron & Steel Group, the biggest steel mill in Henan province.