![](/templates/proglobalmedia-main/images/globe-blue-whitebg.gif)
Gypsum industry news
Etex hires JP Morgan for Knauf Australia assets bid
23 November 2020Australia: Belgium-based Etex has hired financial services provider JP Morgan to help it buy Knauf’s Australian gypsum wallboard portfolio, valued at around US$293m. The Australian newspaper reports that Saint-Gobain and China National Building Material (CNBM) are also interested in the sale.
Knauf is divesting the assets to satisfy the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s fair play rules following its purchase of Boral’s stake in the USG-Boral gypsum wallboard joint venture for US$1.05bn. The companies have until September 2020 to finalise the transaction.
Knauf to gain 100% ownership of USG Boral
29 October 2020Australia/Singapore: Knauf has agreed to buy Boral’s 50% stake in USG Boral for US$1.02bn, bringing its total stake in the former Boral and US-based USG joint venture to 100%. The joint-venture includes gypsum wallboard-based businesses in Australia, New Zealand, Asia and the Middle East. The deal is “subject to typical conditions precedent including in relation to regulatory matters.”
Boral chief executive officer (CEO) and managing director Zlatko Todorcevski said, “We have been working with Knauf for some time to find the best path forward for the business following Knauf’s acquisition of our joint venture partner USG. We recognise that it makes sense for Knauf – being the world’s largest gypsum wallboard player – to have 100% ownership of the business. USG Boral is a great business, and very well positioned to perform strongly under the ownership of Knauf. The strength of the joint venture business and its prospects are fully reflected in the sale price, as demonstrated by the attractive premium, which is a great outcome for Boral shareholders. The sale of Boral’s interest in USG Boral to Knauf will be a step to simplifying Boral’s geographic footprint and product portfolio.”
Saint-Gobain named as potential buyer for Knauf’s Australian gypsum wallboard business
19 October 2020Australia: France-based Saint-Gobain is reportedly considering the purchase of Germany-based Knauf’s US$284m Australian gypsum wallboard business. The Australian newspaper has also named Saint-Gobain as a potential buyer of USG Boral’s US$2.48bn US business. Separately, China National Building Material (CNBM) has been linked to the Knauf sale. Any such deals would be subject to anti-competitiveness checks.
Knauf reportedly looking for buyer in Australia
08 June 2020Australia: Knauf is reportedly looking for buyers for its business in Australia. The Royal Bank of Canada and PricewaterhouseCoopers have been helping the gypsum wallboard producer manage a potential sale, according to the Australian newspaper. The German company operates three wallboard plants in the country. They are thought to be worth up to US$200m.
Any such sale is likely to be related to Knauf’s acquisition of USG in 2019. The US-based company owns a 50% share in USG-Boral, which also operates wallboard plants in Australia. Boral said in April 2020 that it thought it unlikely that the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) would approve its plans for USG-Boral so far. If Knauf were able to sell its other assets in Australia then its options with USG-Boral are more likely to be accepted. Speculation has mounted in the local press about partial or full asset divestments by Knauf in Australia since the USG acquisition.
Boral reports substantial decline in demand
16 April 2020Australia: Boral has reported that, in most jurisdictions, its activities are currently considered to be within the critical infrastructure and construction sectors that are permitted and encouraged to continue as essential businesses. This includes Boral’s US Fly Ash business, which provides an essential service to the energy sector. In some areas however, particularly in North America and Asia, more stringent mandates and restrictions have resulted in temporary closures of several operations.
In addition, demand is declining in most markets and is expected to continue to decline, particularly in residential construction markets where the pipeline of work is substantially reducing in all geographies.
As a result, where it has sufficient inventory levels to supply customers, production curtailments are planned and are now taking place, including shift reductions and temporary plant closures. Boral says that these actions will help to conserve cash and minimise any unintended inventory build-up.
Boral is supporting employees impacted by temporary closures with access to paid leave, unpaid leave, flexible and remote working arrangements (where possible) and assistance with accessing relevant government support.
Boral updates market on USG Boral situation
16 April 2020Australia: Boral has updated the market on its transaction with Knauf in relation to its USG Boral joint venture. On 19 March 2020, Boral announced that its view was that the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) was unlikely to approve the call option in relation to the Australian and New Zealand business. In further discussions between Boral and Knauf, it has now become clear that obtaining the necessary regulatory approvals required to allow the transaction to be implemented as signed in August 2019 is not achievable by the 30 June 2020 deadline. Other conditions to the transaction also remain outstanding.
As a result, Boral and Knauf will consider a range of potential options, with Boral’s objective being to target a cash neutral transaction rather than a transaction with a significant funding requirement for Boral. Discussions are at a preliminary stage and any revised transaction remains subject to agreement between Boral and Knauf, and ultimately will also require the approval of regulators including the ACCC and New Zealand Commerce Commission (NZCC). Given this, the company’s pre-existing US$400m acquisition bridge facility, put in place for the purpose of completing the transaction with Knauf, was allowed to lapse.
Gyprock holds prices in response to coronavirus
06 April 2020Australia: Gypsum wallboard product manufacturer Gyprock has decided to put on hold a planned price increase due to start in June 2020 in response to the coronavirus outbreak. It said that it was doing everything it could to make it sites safe for customers and staff and that its plants, warehouses and trade stores remained open.
Additional hurdles for troubled Boral
23 March 2020Australia: Boral, already dealing with financial difficulty even before the coronavirus pandemic, has withdrawn its full-year profit guidance and warned that it will likely have to re-work its complex wallboard buyout transaction with USG / Knauf. The US$441m deal, announced in August 2019 with Knauf will likely need to be changed, after the Australasian component of it attracted the attention of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC).
Under the complicated deal between USG Boral and Knauf, Boral was to pay US$200m for the other 50% of USG Boral that it did not already own in Australia, and US$241m for a 50% stake of the plasterboard joint venture in Asia. Knauf then had a call option to return to 50% ownership of the Australasian business within five years.
However, the ACCC is now looming as a roadblock. "As Boral and Knauf work with regulators as part of an ongoing process to obtain the relevant approvals, Boral's view now is that the ACCC is unlikely to approve the call option in relation to the Australian and New Zealand business," said Boral in a statement. This means a range of other options will be considered for the transaction.
Boral ‘considering options’ on Knauf deal
20 March 2020Australia: Boral has announced that it is ‘considering a range of potential options’ regarding its planned resumption of 100% ownership of USG Boral Plasterboard from Germany-based Knauf in light of the fact that the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) is ‘unlikely to approve the call option in relation to the Australia and New Zealand business.’ The call option would have given Knauf the right to return to 50% ownership of USG Boral Plasterboard within five years. The ACCC’s likely intervention in the transaction is believed to have to do with Boral’s financial situation.
Troubled Boral sees profit slide 40%
20 February 2020Australia: Boral has seen a 40% decrease in its profit during the first half of its fiscal year a period that ended on 31 December 2019. Its profit fell to US$90.4m for the period from US$151m a year earlier. Boral said that this was due to higher costs and weak housing activity in Australia and South Korea. It was also affected by the costs of transactions between its USG-Boral joint-venture partner USG and Knauf, which bought USG in 2019, along with its interest in USG-Boral.