Billionaire Gautam Adani has agreed to buy Holcim Ltd.'s Indian subsidiaries in a $10.5-billion (over Rs 81,000-crore) deal.
Adani will acquire Holcim's stake in Ambuja Cements Ltd. (63.19%) at Rs 385/share and in ACC Ltd. (4.48%) at Rs 2,300 apiece. The acquisition will trigger an open offer, taking the overall purchase value to $10.5 billion. That implies an enterprise value of $163 a tonne, according to BQ Prime’s calculation.
Shares of ACC rose over 7% and Ambuja Cements advanced nearly 3.5% in early trading on Monday. The benchmark Nifty 50 was trading 1% higher at the time.
Brokerages view the deal as a positive for India's cement sector as they do not expect a fight for market share by cutting prices.
Here's what analysts made of Adani's acquisition of Ambuja Cements and ACC:
Jefferies
- Adani's strategy would be keenly watched. 
- Premium valuations could mean higher targeted unit profitability. 
- Targets based on maintaining brand premium, savings from royalty reduction and other synergies. Retaining brand position is key for sustained profitability 
- Fight for market share by reducing cement prices is less likely. 
Phillip Capital
- Maintains 'buy' for ACC; revises target price from Rs 2,550 to Rs 2,850 (current market price: Rs 2,235). 
- Upgrades Ambuja Cement 'buy' from 'neutral', target price revised from Rs 410 to Rs 440 (current market price: Rs 367.90). 
- Adani emerges as the second largest player in Indian cement industry. 
- Adani now becomes a 70 million-tonnes-a-year capacity player, next only to UltraTech Cement. 
- ACC and Ambuja Cement become direct, identifiable individual promoter-controlled entities. 
- Adani has the potential to turn around the fortune of the whole industry, and not just theirs. 
- Upgrade target multiples for ACC from 13x to 15x and for Ambuja Cement from 16x to 18x. 
Disclaimer: Adani Enterprises is in the process of acquiring a 49% stake in Quintillion Business Media Pvt. Ltd., the owner of BQ Prime.