金銀鑄廠的合拼 !
www.zerohedge.com
Submitted by Ronan Manly, BullionStar.com
German precious metals group Heraeus Precious Metals (HPM), part of the Heraeus industrial group, has just announced the full acquisition of Swiss precious metals refining group Argor-Heraeus.
Heraeus is headquartered in Hanau, just outside Frankfurt.
Argor-Heraeus is headquartered in Mendrisio in the Swiss Canton of
Ticino, beside the Italian border.
The
Heraeus takeover announcement, on 3 April 2017, continues a noticeable
acquisition trend in the Swiss precious metals refining sector and
follows the July 2016 acquisition of Neuchâtel based Metalor Technologies by Japanese Tanaka Precious Metals, and the takeover of Ticino-based Swiss gold and silver refiner Valcambi by Indian group Rajesh Exports in July 2015. The Heraeus press release from Monday 3 April can be read here in English.
A Deal Telegraphed in November
In early November 2016, BullionStar was among the first to report that
Swiss Argor-Heraeus was indeed an acquisition target. At the time,
market sources had indicated that the most likely acquirer was a private
equity company Capinvest, with other suitors said to be Japanese group
Asahi and Swiss based MKS-PAMP.
In late 2016, S&P Global Platts reported that Swiss private equity company “Capvis”
was in talks to acquire Argor-Heraeus, with one of Platts sources
quoting a purchase price in the region of €200 million with completion
in Q1 2017, while another source said €200 million was too high a
figure. At the end of the day, a Capvis takeover did not materialise and
earlier this year market sources said that Argor-Heraeus was no longer
for sale (externally). In hindsight, it was probably at this stage that
Heraeus decided to make its move. Alternatively, the discussions with
external buyers may have just been conducted so as to gauge sentiment
and establish a series of potential valuations for the Swiss refiner.
As a reminder, Argor-Hereaus had an unusual ownership structure in that it was jointly owned by 4 shareholders, namely German group Heraeus, German bank Commerzbank, the Austrian Mint,
and Argor-Heraeus management. Prior to the takeover, Heraeus was the
largest shareholder holding 33% of Argor-Heraeus shares, with
Commerzbank holding a further 32.7% of the equity, the Austrian Mint
holding another 30%, and Argor-Heraeus’s management holding the balance
of shares.
As
an existing shareholder and board member of Argor-Heraeus, the Heraeus
group would have been privy to all of Argor-Heraeus’s financial and
operational details, and so would have been in an advantageous position
to negotiate purchase price details with Commerzbank and the Austrian
Mint, which would have been a natural advantage relative to external
potential acquirers.
Purchase Price
However, the exact purchase price Argor-Heraeus is not known, since, according to the Heraeus press release “the parties have agreed not to disclose financial details of the deal”. Notwithstanding this, German newspaper Handelsblatt is claiming that the Heraeus takeover values Argor-Heraeus at “half a billion Swiss Francs“, since according to Handelsblatt’s sources, Heraeus paid “few hundred million euros for the remaining Argor shares“.
With CHF 500 million equal to approximately €468 million, the
Handelsblatt claim would mean that Heraeus may have paid €313 million
for the 67% of Argor-Heraeus that it did not own. This would be far
higher than the €200 million figure that S&P Platts mentioned in
December.
Motivations for Acquisition
According
to Heraeus, one of its motivations in acquiring Argor-Heraeus is to
strengthen its capabilities in gold and silver refining by tapping “Argor’s expertise and processing capacity for gold and silver”,
since Heraeus considers itself strongest in platinum group metals.
Heraeus states that another driver of the acquisition is geographical
diversification given that Argor-Heraeus has facilities on the ground in
Chile, as well as in Italy, Germany and of course Switzerland, while
Heraeus has a strong presence in Asia, North America and India in
addition to Germany.
Conclusion
With
3 of the 4 giant Swiss precious metals refineries having now been
acquired by new owners within less than 2 years of each other, this
leaves the PAMP refinery,
owned by MKS PAMP, as the only one of the “Big 4″ Swiss refineries to
have bypassed this recent flurry of corporate control activity. As to
whether MKS PAMP will itself become a takeover target is debatable, but
it would be surprising if MKS isn’t thinking about this very question
right now.
Further information
For
more information on the Heraeus group and its precious metals
activities, see BullionStar Gold University profile of Heraeus https://www.bullionstar.com/gold-university/heraeus-refinery
For a full overview of Swiss refiner Argor-Heraeus, please see BullionStar Gold University profile of Argor-Heraeus https://www.bullionstar.com/gold-university/argor-heraeus-refinery
For
more information on the Tanaka acquisition of Metalor Technologies, see
specific section of Metalor profile on BullionStar Gold University https://www.bullionstar.com/gold-university/metalor-refinery#heading-4
For more information on the acquisition of Swiss Valcambi by Rajesh Exports, see BullionStar blog https://www.bullionstar.com/blogs/ronan-manly/swiss-gold-refineries-and-the-sale-of-valcambi
For analysis of initial news (last November) about Argor-Heraeus being acquired, see BullionStar blog https://www.bullionstar.com/blogs/ronan-manly/swiss-gold-refinery-argor-heraeus-to-be-acquired-by-private-equity-investors
Note that Heraeus also produces the popular BullionStar 1 kg silver bars on behalf of BullionStar, while Argor-Heraeus mints BullionStar’s own branded 100 gram gold bars. In addition, BullionStar carries a wide range of other Heraeus silver bars, Heraeus gold bars, and Argor-Heraeus gold bars.
The above article was inititally published on the BullionStar website here.
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