Braskem buying Sunoco's polypropylene business for $350 million
 
on 02-02-2010 07:38

Source: Plastics News (01/02/2010)

Brazilian plastics giant Braskem SA has made a major move into the North American market, buying the polypropylene business of Sunoco Inc. for $350 million in cash.
The deal was announced Feb. 1 and is expected to close by April 1. São Paulo-based Brazil will take on PP plants operated by Philadelphia-based Sunoco in Marcus Hook, Pa.; La Porte, Texas; and Neal, W.Va., which have combined annual capacity of 2.1 billion pounds. The sale also includes Sunoco’s Research and Technology Center in Pittsburgh.
The Sunoco PP business “has very competitive margins and access to competitive feedstock,” Braskem Chief Financial Officer Carlos Fadigas said in a Feb. 1 conference call.
The purchase “is in line with our strategic plan of establishing a foothold in the U.S. and enhancing the market for greenfield projects in Latin America,” he added. The U.S. market was attractive to Braskem, officials said, since it is the world’s largest consumer of PP and is expected to grow at a rate of at least 1.3-times GDP for the next several years.
In a news release, Sunoco Chairman and CEO Lynn Elsenhans said the sale “produces value for our shareholders by monetizing a business that has not been able to meet its cost of capital.” Braskem is paying a multiple of between four and five times earnings before interest, taxes, debt and amatorization (EBITDA) for the business, which Sunoco had acquired as part of its 2000 purchase of Aristech Chemical Corp. from Mitsubishi Corp. for $695 million. At that time, the business included a 400 million pound-per-year capacity plant in Bayport, Texas, that Sunoco closed last year.
Sunoco is retaining ownership of a phenol and derivatives business that it also acquired in the Aristech transaction. In late 2001, former Sunoco CEO Jack Drosdick described the Aristech deal as “the biggest single thing Sunoco’s done to grow the company in the last decade.”
Sunoco’s PP unit had sales of $720 million and pretax profit of $70 million in 2009, according to Fadigas, who described the 4-5 earnings multiple as “competitive.” Sunoco expects to record a pre-tax loss on the sale in the first quarter of 2010 of approximately $185 million to $195 million.
The PP plants use Spheripol-brand and Unipol-brand process technologies. In the North American PP market, Sunoco ranks fourth in capacity and fifth in annual sales, based on 2008 estimates. The unit’s existing management — including top executive Bruce Rubin — is expected to remain in place. Sunoco had been seeking a buyer for the unit since late 2008.
“The idea is to keep the management that’s already there,” Fadigas said. “They know the customers and the clients and the business.”
Although the Sunoco PP business is not fully backward-integrated on propylene monomer feedstock, Fadigas said Braskem has a 10-year supply agreement in place with Sunoco and also will continue to source feedstock from LyondellBasell Industries, Valero Corp. and other suppliers.
“Seventy percent of our propylene needs are already contracted in advance,” he said. “We’ll buy the other 30 percent on the spot market.”
The deal will further expand Braskem, which recently signed another deal to buy majority stake in Quattor Petroquimica, another Brazilian firm. That deal will make Braskem the largest maker of commodity plastics PP, polyethylene and PVC in the Americas.
Fadigas added that Braskem is on track to meet its goal of being one of the world’s five largest petrochemical firms by 2020. It ranks eighth after the Sunoco deal and will climb to seventh when it opens a 480 million pound-capacity polyethylene plant in Brazil later this year.
   
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