DEALWATCH: Potash Corp Should Not Bid For K+S Yet
2009年9月7日 - 11:26PM
Dow Jones News
Talk of Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc. (POT), the world's
largest potash producer, looking to buy German rival K+S AG
(SDF.XE) will come as a surprise to many who follow the industry.
It would be better off paying for smaller potash assets and has no
need to rush into a big deal.
If it goes ahead, the purchase would reverse a decade-long
organic growth strategy steadfastly followed by the Canadian-based
company. Also, Potash already controls nearly a quarter of the
world's potash supply, raising the question of how easy it would be
to gain European antitrust approval if it bid for K+S.
Undoubtedly, Potash is one of the most successful in the
business, reflected in its solid 46% margin on the last 12 months'
earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.
Potash's investment-grade balance sheet has a A-1 credit rating
from Standard & Poor's but that would be badly stretched if it
pursued the deal. Talk surrounded Potash Corp paying EUR50 per
share for K+S Aktiengesellschaft which would stamp an enterprise
value of $12 billion on it.
Potash Corp's current net debt to Ebitda stands at 4.1x, 10
times what it was last year. It has only $371 million of cash. But
K+S's debt is low at only 1.2x Ebitda, which means the combined net
debt to Ebitda would stand at 3.7X.
Potash's intent is understandable. K+S would give it a European
footprint that would be attractive to a company which is strong in
Canada, the U.S., Brazil and the Middle East. K+S also has a
presence in Chile.
While the EUR50 share price is at a 37% premium over K+S
Friday's closing price of EUR36.50, one still has to doubt the
willingness of K+S to sell out just yet.
K+S shares were trading at EUR95 levels just about a year ago
before falling on reduced demand for potash. Meanwhile, its
management has been pursuing a strong independent strategy of its
own. In April it paid $1.68 billion to buy the Morton Salt unit
from Dow Chemical Co. (DOW), becoming the world's largest supplier
of salt.
Competitors On The Move
That said, the fertilizer landscape is changing. Potash would be
worried about its competitive position if either Agrium Inc. (AGU)
merged with CF Industries Holdings Inc. (CF) or CF merged with
Terra Industries Inc. (TRA). Both deals are under discussion among
the three companies.
Potash has not been involved in any deals since it beat out
Freeport-McMoRan for the $1.4 billion takeover of Arcadian back in
1996.
But given its existing leadership position, Potash Corp. would
be better off paying for smaller potash assets. It should wait at
least until Agrium, CF Industries and Terra Industries sort out who
partners with whom. One of the three will be left out and could be
an ideal Potash partner.
Of the three, Agrium, valued at $8.4 billion, is the best fit
given its complimentary operations in North East Asia and
Argentina. CF and Terra have mostly North American footprints.
Even Uralkali (URKA.RS), Russia's second-largest potash producer
would be cheaper, and it would give Potash Corp access to the rich
mines of Russia and an export distribution network to China. 40% of
Uralkali's potash exports went to China in 2007.
There's another reason for Potash to watch and wait: the
uncertainty of fertilizer prices.
Agrium Chief Executive Mike Wilson believes we are at an
inflection point and the sector is on the verge of a big
turnaround. Demand is also seen rising later this year. The
International Fertilizer Association has forecast consumption
growth of 3.6% by the end of this year. Fertilizer consumption fell
14% in the first six months of the current year.
Yet the IFA also hinted at a possible potash surplus in the long
term and K+S was forced to cut prices in June to respond to sagging
demand. Both K+S and Potash Corp have cut production to help dispel
supply demand imbalances.
Potash has achieved its ambition to become the global leader in
production by growing organically, and it does not have to rush
into a deal yet.
(Kevin M. Nichols is a columnist for Dow Jones Newswires on the
energy, industrial and auto sectors. He has more than seven years
experience as an analyst and trader on Wall Street and was formerly
an executive in the proprietary trading unit at an investment bank.
He can be reached at +1 (212) 416-2104 or by email:
kevin.nichols@dowjones.com. Dow Jones Newswires is enhancing its
news, commentary and analysis for the investment banking community,
and is providing it on this service temporarily. To ensure
continued access to the best of Dow Jones news and opinion on
companies, sectors and deals for bankers and research analysts,
please contact investmentbanker@dowjones.com.)