Showing posts with label Dow Chemical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dow Chemical. Show all posts

07 May 2012

Dow Chemical Expands into Africa

Dow Chemical Co., the largest U.S. chemicals producer, said it expects sales in Africa to at least double within three years as demand for its products including water-purification systems and building materials grows.

The company, based in Midland, Michigan, inaugurated an office in Nairobi yesterday that will serve the East African region, the Chief Executive Officer said yesterday in an interview in the Kenyan capital. Dow, which has an annual capital investment budget of $2.5 billion, will initially spend an average of $30 million per year in Africa on areas including manufacturing facilities to grow its sales.

Dow has been reviewing opportunities in Africa and really reinforcing our commitment to the continent. This is a multibillion dollar opportunity for Dow. We are less than a billion dollars revenue today and most of that is centered in southern Africa and northern Africa.

Economic growth in Africa may average 5 percent over the next two decades as the continent boosts its manufacturing capacity, diversifies trade by reducing its reliance on agriculture and invests in infrastructure including power supply, the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa said in a report in March. Growth averaged more than 5 percent between 2000 and 2010, helped by improved economic management and rising prices for its commodities, it said.

Dow has manufacturing facilities in 37 countries and sales offices in 160 nations. It spends $1.7 billion on research and development annually, with two thirds of sales generated outside the U.S.

Growing Manufacturing

Strategies are in place to continue growing outside the U.S., by utilizing manufacturing facilities, value add and over time, research and development.

Dow, founded in 1897 as a bleach maker, is the world’s biggest producer of ethylene, chlorine, epoxy resins and linear low-density polyethylene plastic. It’s the world’s second- biggest chemical maker by revenue behind Germany’s BASF SE.

The strategy to grow sales in eastern Africa will begin with importing products into the regional market, warehousing and working with global supply chains, Liveris said. Over time, the company may introduce manufacturing and eventually research and development facilities in the region, he said.

In partnership with Saudi Arabian Oil Co., a state-owned energy supplier, Dow is currently building the Sadara Chemical complex in Saudi Arabia at a cost of $20 billion. The plant is expected to begin production in 2015 with 40 percent of output being exported to Asia and as much as 35 percent to the Middle East and Africa.


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04 May 2012

Dow Under Fire for 1984 Incident

Story first appeared in The Detroit News.

When Dow Chemical Co. inked a 10-year sponsorship agreement with the Olympic Games in 2010, the company envisioned an estimated worldwide sales boost of $1 billion.

Instead, the Midland-based chemical company has been embroiled in a public relations controversy, months before the London summer games begin July 27.

Protesters still outraged at the 1984 Bhopal gas leak that killed thousands have claimed Dow's sponsorship has no place at the Olympics. India, Amnesty International, Greenpeace and some British politicians want Dow to pay $1.7 billion to Bhopal victims on top of the $470 million Union Carbide paid in 1989.

Dow has mounted an aggressive defense, noting that it had nothing to do with the 28-year-old disaster that claimed an estimated 15,000 lives, all liability issues have been settled and that the Indian government bears responsibility for any problems at the site.

Public relations experts question whether Dow's strategy is helping to quiet the uproar, but the company and chemical industry say the negative publicity lets them clarify the issues and discuss the positive contributions of the chemical industry.

Dow has called Bhopal a terrible tragedy and said it understands the lingering concern. Dow's vice president of Olympic operations, also argued in a statement that any questions about the lack of remediation at the Bhopal plant site should be directed to the state government of Madhya Pradesh, which revoked the lease of Eveready Industries India, Ltd. (formerly Union Carbide India, Ltd.) in 1998 and took over full responsibility and accountability for the site. For 14 years under the state government's control, nothing has been done at the site.

The strategy raises doubts among some marketing experts.

It would seem unwise for Dow to not acknowledge the anger and the viewpoint in London by these protesters. Dow should consider reaching out beyond the media and carefully delivering its message to groups in London, where the protests are taking place.

The longer the controversy drags on, the more difficulty Dow will have in reducing the bad publicity.

But Dow counters in an email that the added scrutiny has benefits. An unanticipated effect of the increased attention that Dow's Olympic sponsorship has received is that the company has additional opportunities to outline its overall support for the Games and to discuss the many products it has produced for Olympic-related infrastructure and equipment.

Roots of Bhopal

The controversy started with a chemical release at a Union Carbide plant in Bhopal, India, in 1984 that killed up to 3,000 people within days. Union Carbide paid $470 million to victims through the government of India in 1989.

After Union Carbide sold the plant in 1994, it eventually was taken over by a regional government in India. In 2001, Dow bought Union Carbide. At the time, some shareholders worried that Dow could be saddled with liabilities from Bhopal.

The Bhopal incident remained off the public radar until the Dow CEO signed the 10-year Olympics sponsorship agreement in 2010.

The company will pay $100 million every four years during the agreement, which includes every winter and summer event through the 2020 Olympics. The company wants to promote its products -- from the environmentally friendly plastic decorative wrap around the London Olympic stadium prior to the opening ceremony to the specialty plastic materials in the stadium's seats.

The International Olympic Committee has backed Dow's sponsorship, even after the press in India reported that an Indian sports official asked the IOC to scrap the deal.

The IOC understands that Dow never owned or operated the facility in Bhopal, and that it is the State Government of Madhya Pradesh which owns and controls the former plant site. The company has supported the Olympic movement for over 30 years, providing financial support and bringing industry-leading expertise and innovation to the Games.

No word on boycott

Officials in India, the second largest populated country in the world, may boycott part or all of the London games, but the IOC told The News it has received no notice from the Indian National Olympic Committee about a boycott. The Indian committee did not respond to a request for comment.

There has been no evidence yet that the controversy has hurt business. The company's stock price is up about 32 percent to $33.35 a share from the 2010 sponsorship announcement. No investment firms have downgraded Dow's stock because of its Olympics deal.

Public relations expert Batra says the controversy is tricky to navigate because of legal ramifications.

Saying too much about the protests and Bhopal might come back to bite the company financially, since India and others have called on Dow to pay an additional $1.7 billion, he said.

It's a difficult balancing act for a company in this situation to show sympathy, diffuse the situation, maintain legal distance and stay away from legal judgments. To do anything more than show sympathy might make them open to the charge that they are responsible in some way for Bhopal.

Still, the uproar has turned attention to the chemical industry that could pay off in the long run, said Anne Kolton, vice president of communications for the American Chemistry Council, an industry group that includes Dow.

There are always many people watching any large industry or institution, looking for evidence of transparency, integrity, responsibility and safety in how they do business. While the scrutiny may be on the chemical industry in various contexts, the attention is welcome.


For more local and Michigan business related news, visit the Michigan Business News blog.
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29 April 2010

Business Briefs

The Detroit News



Midland -- Dow Chemical Co., the largest U.S. chemical maker, reported Wednesday that its first-quarter profit surged more than fivefold to $718 million from a year earlier.

First-quarter net income rose to $551 million, or 41 cents a share, from $24 million, or 3 cents, compared with a year ago, Dow said.

"This quarter was indeed a pivotal point in giving the world a glimpse of our earnings' power," Dow CEO Andrew Liveris said in a conference call.

Federal-Mogul sales surge 20 percent

Auto parts supplier Federal-Mogul Corp. posted a $17 million first-quarter profit as sales surged 20 percent.

Net income was 15 cents a share, compared with a loss of $101 million, or $1.02, a year earlier, the Southfield-based company said Wednesday. The per-share results, excluding a charge for a Venezuelan currency devaluation of 35 cents, beat the 22-cent average of three analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Sales rose to $1.49 billion, benefiting from improved demand worldwide.

Mitsubishi, Peugeot reach SUV deal

Mitsubishi Motors Corp. and PSA Peugeot Citroën announced Wednesday that they have come to an agreement to collaborate on a compact SUV.

These new compact SUVs will have specific designs for Peugeot and Citroën while sharing many components with the Mitsubishi vehicle, named RVR in Japan and ASX in Europe.

Obama to appoint Yellen to Fed board


President Barack Obama today will name Janet Yellen as vice chairwoman of the Fed board of governors, according to two people familiar with the decision.

Obama also will name Sarah Bloom Raskin, Maryland's commissioner of financial regulation, and Peter Diamond, an economics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, for the two remaining open seats on the seven-person board, according to the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity before the announcement.

The nominations are subject to Senate confirmation.

Fed vows to hold line on rates for 'extended' period

Washington -- The Federal Reserve in a 9-1 decision Wednesday retained its pledge to hold rates at historic lows for an "extended period." Doing so will help energize the recovery.

GE glimpses light after conglomerate's cloudy year

Houston -- General Electric says the broader economy and its own business have stabilized, and that the "clouds are breaking" after one of the worst years ever for the conglomerate. The company, at its annual meeting in Houston, is telling investors that key economic indicators like housing and unemployment have stabilized, and that capital markets are improving. General Electric Co . says losses have peaked in its GE Capital lending unit and that the division should return to profit growth soon. GE Capital was the source of many of the company's problems last year, hit by the downturn in areas like credit cards, mortgages and commercial real estate.

Google's brand value of $114B tops global list

Google Inc . topped the 2010 BrandZ ranking of the 100 most valuable global brands by Millward Brown Optimor, with an estimated brand value of $114 billion. International Business Machines Corp . and Apple Inc . advanced to second and third place from fourth and sixth last year. Research In Motion Ltd .'s BlackBerry moved two spots to 14th place. Technology companies accounted for 6 of the top 10 brands. Apple, Hewlett-Packard Co ., Amazon .com Inc ., Verizon Communications Inc . and Baidu Inc . all gained more than 25 percent in brand value.

16 April 2010

Dow CEO Urges U.S. to Aid Green Energy Industry

The Detroit News

Washington -- The head of Midland-based Dow Corning Corp. today urged Congress to help U.S. companies aggressively develop solar, wind and other renewable energy through tax breaks and other policies different countries are using to boost their green industries.

"It is time for America to enact policies that will essentially assure this industry grows here," said Dow president and CEO Stephanie A. Burns, who added her company is investing $5 billion in solar technology.

At a House Ways and Means hearing on green energy, Burns called on Congress to create a tax structure that encourages investment in renewables and to promote awareness among domestic consumers to spur demand.

The hearing, chaired by Rep. Sander Levin, D-Royal Oak, featured testimony by billionaire oilman and green fuels champion T. Boone Pickens.

Levin called the hearing to gather ideas from Obama administration officials, green-energy experts and business leaders about ways Congress can help the United States move more quickly to reliance on renewable energy sources, such as solar and hydrogen fuel cells.

Already, the federal government is taking steps. The $787 billion economic stimulus bill, for example, included $2.3 billion in investment tax credits for manufacturers that retool and expand facilities in the United States to produce advanced energy equipment. President Barack Obama has called for $5 billion more in such tax credits.

Witnesses urged more steps to ensure the United States can compete in the green-energy arena with China, which is furiously pursuing green technologies, and other countries.

"While jobs are created when we construct a solar facility," Levin said, "still more jobs are created when the components that are used in that facility are manufactured here in the United States.

"If we are not aggressive about expanding our green manufacturing capacity, these manufacturing jobs will be created overseas and the United States will become more reliant on products that are produced outside of our borders," Levin said.

But Rep. Dave Camp of Midland, the ranking Republican on the committee, warned against taking away favorable tax policies for the oil and gas and the coal industries, which produce most of the nation's energy.

Camp noted that in 2009, 83 percent of U.S. energy was supplied by fossil fuels, compared with 9 percent from nuclear plants and only 8 percent from solar, wind and other renewables.

"You cannot increase the cost of producing 85 percent of the energy being used today and expect consumers or employers to benefit from tax incentives that are going to less than 10 percent of the energy being used today," Camp said. "The math just doesn't add up."

27 February 2010

A Clean Energy Triple Play

Governor Granholm Posts to Huffington that Michigan Will Lead the Green Economy in America

"Just Try to Keep Up" she Warns!

Huffington Post

Last May, I first posted here about how Michigan would lead the green industrial revolution. Some folks scoffed at that idea. They said I was too optimistic. They said Michigan would never lead in a green economy.

We're working to prove them wrong.

Today, I was in Midland, Michigan, as the Dow Chemical Company announced over $1 billion in clean-energy expansions - which, combined with nine other projects announced today, will create over 17,000 new jobs. In three separate ventures, Dow will help create the future of wind, solar, and advanced-battery technology in Michigan's Great Lakes Bay Region - a triple play for our nation's clean-energy future.



First, Dow announced it is moving forward on a truly game-changing product: It will build a $600 million full-scale production facility for its DOW™ POWERHOUSE™ Solar Shingle in Midland. These shingles have the potential to transform the way consumers get power by turning a typical home roof into a true powerhouse in every sense of the word. What makes the product revolutionary is its easy installation - no different from an ordinary shingle. That's why it was one of TIME magazine's "50 Best Inventions of 2009". It's a win for Michigan, for consumers, and ultimately, for our planet.

Dow is also a key player in Michigan's bid to be the advanced-battery capital of the world. Its Dow Kokam joint venture is investing $342 million to build a large-scale manufacturing site to help power the hybrid and electric vehicles of the future. Since we passed the first-in-the-nation advanced-battery credits, Michigan has seen more advanced-battery activity than any other state, meaning up to 40,000 great new jobs by 2020.

Last, but certainly not least, Dow has been designated a Center of Energy Excellence, a program we instituted in 2008 to help make Michigan the North American center of the clean energy industry. As Michigan's seventh Center of Energy Excellence, Dow will partner with the Oak Ridge National Laboratory to help tackle a major challenge for the wind-energy sector: making strong, light carbon fiber materials available for applications like wind turbine blades. This is a great opportunity for Dow to find a solution that can be used throughout the wind-energy industry.

The DOW™ POWERHOUSE™ announcement is the latest in a series of solar wins for Michigan. Hemlock Semiconductor, the world's leading producer of polycrystalline silicon (the critical component of solar panels), has invested $2.5 billion in the Great Lakes Bay Region over the years, spurring other development. Also headquartered in Midland is the world's leader in silicon product research, Dow Corning, where crucial research into the solar products of the future is conducted.


In three separate ventures, Dow will help create the future of wind, solar, and advanced-battery technology in Michigan's Great Lakes Bay Region - a triple play for our nation's clean-energy future.

Other companies are following Dow Corning and Hemlock Semiconductor's lead. In Midland, Evergreen Solar opened a new solar plant last year, and is ramping up production of its new "string ribbon solar wafer" technology. Last October, Suniva announced it would invest $250 million in a new solar manufacturing facility in Saginaw County. And just in December, GlobalWatt decided to locate its newest solar plant in Saginaw -- choosing Michigan over a competing site in Texas, largely because so many solar businesses are already in the area.

But, that's not all. Since targeting clean energy as a major sector to help diversify and grow Michigan's economy in 2006, we've made great strides. In fact, just since I posted here last May, we've made progress toward turning the green industrial revolution into a reality in Michigan:

• In June, General Electric announced its new advanced technology and training center outside Detroit, where new renewable-energy products will be researched and developed... meaning thousands of great, green jobs for Michigan.

• In July, I issued an executive directive to reduce Michigan's greenhouse gas emissions by 20 percent by 2020 and 80 percent by 2050, because going green isn't just good for the environment - it's good business.

• In August, Vice President Biden announced over $1.35 billion in Department of Energy grants funded by the Recovery Act for Michigan advanced-battery manufacturers - the largest share of any state in the nation.

• In September, I traveled to Japan and met with key executives considering clean-energy projects in Michigan. My previous investment missions to Austria, Belgium, Germany, Israel, Japan, Jordan and Sweden have resulted in more than 10,800 jobs created and retained.

• In October, Michigan State University restructured its MSU Extension, maintaining its traditional focus on agriculture while expanding its role in renewable-energy projects. After all, now is the time to "Go Green!"

• In November, Michigan was proud to host the American Wind Energy Association's Small and Community Wind Conference and Exhibition in Detroit, with over 112 exhibitors from around the world.



• In December, General Motors announced it would invest $336 million in its Detroit Hamtramck Assembly plant to begin building the Chevy Volt later this year. GM has invested $700 million in the eight facilities across the state involved in Volt production.

• Last month, as the world's gaze shifted to the future of the American auto industry at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Ford announced an investment of $450 million in expanding electric vehicle initiatives in Michigan... including moving battery assembly work from Mexico to Michigan.

We're becoming the hub for advanced-battery technology. Our solar-energy industry is rapidly progressing. This year, we will aggressively pursue companies in the wind-energy sector to give Michigan the competitive advantage that is so successful for our battery and solar sectors. We will continue to focus on leading the way to a clean-energy future here in Michigan. We are building the new Michigan economy, piece-by-piece, town-by-town, in communities across the state. Just click here to see some more examples.

And so, as I wrote last May: "Watch - Michigan will lead a green industrial revolution. I invite you to watch us, encourage us, and join us.

And the doubters?

I encourage them to just try and keep up."

Jennifer M. Granholm was elected governor in 2002 and re-elected in 2006. She began her career in public service as a judicial clerk for Michigan's 6th Circuit Court of Appeals. She became a federal prosecutor in Detroit in 1990, and in 1994, she was appointed Wayne County Corporation Counsel. Granholm was elected Michigan's first female attorney general in 1998.

Since becoming governor, she has worked to grow and diversify Michigan's economy, create jobs, ensure world-class educational opportunities for every Michigan student, create universal access to affordable health care, and stand up for Michigan workers and families during tough economic times. While aggressively pursuing her top priority of putting Michigan families first, she has also worked to ensure that state government spends every penny efficiently and has successfully resolved more than $6 billion in budget deficits.

14 October 2009

Dow Starts Construction Of Midland Battery Factory


From M-Live

The Dow Chemical Co. is starting preliminary construction in Midland County for a factory that will develop and manufacture advanced batteries for the automobile industry.

The 800,000-square-foot factory is planned for a location in Midland at the corner of Saginaw Street and Bay City Road.

The estimated $665 million project is a joint venture between Dow and a battery maker named Townsend Kokam.

Work is under way now to reroute underground power, fiber optics and steam utilities that are currently located within the planned battery facility site, Dow Chemical announced Wednesday.

Workers also will relocate the fence line since the battery plant site is located outside Dow’s current boundaries.

Johnston Contracting of Midland and Alloy Construction Service Inc., 401 Balsam in Carrollton were awarded work for the utility relocation. Dow expects to award further construction contracts in spring 2010.

The Dow Kokam venture has not begun hiring the estimated 800 people it needs to run the factory.

03 April 2009

Dow Chemical's Debt Rating At Issue


As Originally Posted at the Wall Street Journal

Dow Chemical Co. is set to buy rival Rohm & Haas Co. Wednesday, starting the clock on its efforts to pay for the $16.3 billion purchase.

But with the outlook for the chemicals industry glum, investors are waiting for Dow to provide more details on how it will repay the about $10 billion in debt required to complete the purchase.

"As of April first Dow will be a highly leveraged company in a very challenging economic environment," said David Begleiter, a chemicals analyst with Deutsche Bank Securities.

Weak demand for chemicals and plastics is battering even companies with relatively little debt. On Tuesday, debt-rating company Fitch Ratings changed its outlook on rival DuPont Co.'s credit rating to "negative" from "stable," saying the chemicals sector won't brighten in the next 12 to 18 months.

Midland, Mich.-based Dow must provide detailed plans for repaying its debt to keep its investment-grade credit rating. Moody's Investors Service said it could reach a decision on that rating by today, and Standard & Poor's has said it will decide "soon."

The chemical giant Tuesday said it continues to examine ways to raise cash and reduce the debt burden. Earlier this year it cut its annual dividend by 64%, saving about $1 billion a year. The company has said it plans to issue up to $5.4 billion in new securities and raise about $4 billion from asset sales, including Rohm & Haas' profitable Morton Salt unit.

Andrew Liveris, Dow's chief executive, has said the company has received more than six bids for Morton Salt and expects it to sell for more than $1.5 billion. The company Tuesday declined to comment on the status of the negotiations. It has said it plans to sell stakes in a Dutch oil-refining complex and a Southeast Asia petrochemicals business.

To conclude the purchase of the specialty chemicals maker, Dow will use up to $7 billion from investors and up to $10 billion from a loan that must be repaid in the next two years.

Dow intends to use assets sales to help pay back the short-term loan. The salt business is a rare bright spot in the otherwise gloomy chemical sector due to a string of bad winters that has dwindled supplies of the salt used to de-ice streets and sidewalks.

But selling other assets will probably be tougher due to tight credit conditions and the trough in the business of making commonplace chemicals and plastics.

The company's shares Tuesday were up 13 cents at $8.43 in 4 p.m. composite trading on the New York's Stock Exchange. The stock is about 74% below its level last July, when the Rohm & Haas deal was struck.

Dow was in a very different position then. The company was counting on $9 billion from selling a stake in some of its plants to a Kuwaiti company when it agreed to pay a 74% premium for Rohm & Haas.

But the Kuwaiti joint venture fell through in late December under pressure from the Kuwaiti government, and business in the chemical sector soured due to the economic recession.

Dow reneged on the merger, saying it would be financially disastrous for both companies, and Philadelphia-based Rohm & Haas sued. The two parties settled their dispute in March after Dow extended the terms for a portion of its short-term loan from one year to two years, and two major Rohm & Haas shareholders agreed to invest up to $3 billion in the combined company.

15 March 2009

Dow Chemical / Rohm & Haas Still Have Problems

As Originally Posted to The Wall Street Journal

Dow Chemical and Rohm & Haas spent months fighting over their $15.3 billion deal, weeks engulfed in legal squabbles and the last frantic days negotiating a settlement that will enable Dow Chemical to go through with the acquisition of its chemicals rival.


A Hollywood ending? More like one of Shakespeare’s “problem plays,” in which justice is served but the audience leaves morally uneasy about the resolution. That is where Dow Chemical is, still struggling with high debt and oppressive interest payments while its revenue has fallen off and it has cut nearly one-third of its operations. And each victory of the settlement is shadowed by the prospect of a future defeat.

For instance, Dow Chemical won some attractive concessions from the syndicate of banks behind its $13 billion bridge loan: extending the bridge for one more year and giving Dow a total commitment of $20.5 billion–$12.5 billion in the first year and $8 billion in the second year. In the first year Dow will pay a modest interest rate of just Libor plus 1.25 percentage points. And all this after Dow Chemical has complained that its business wouldn’t be viable if it were forced to to through with its agreed-to acquisition of Rohm & Haas. (Dow Chemical also received money from the Rohm & Haas family trust, Berkshire Hathaway and the Kuwait Investment Authority, so it may need only around $10 billion of the bridge loan, according to Hilliard Lyons analyst Stephen O’Neil.)

Yet, the new debt agreement wasn’t enough for the folks at credit rater Moody’s, who still warned that Dow Chemical could be downgraded if it doesn’t right its financial house and reduce that debt. Debt also was spotlighted by Citigroup analyst P.J. Juvekar, who warned investors against buying Dow stock right now because:

Dow’s agreement to acquire Rohm puts it in a leveraged position going into the downturn. Dow ends up with gross debt of $25.2 billion (net debt of $22.1 billion) after drawing ~$10B on a bridge loan…High Operational Leverage AND Huge Financial Leverage – Dow’s “twin leverage” magnifies the EPS impact in a downturn, but on the flip side, this can work great in an upturn…Now to be sure, we don’t think there are any “insolvency” concerns on Dow despite the insolvency argument put forth during negotiations with ROH….We remain in a deepening recession that is global in nature, so we think investors should stay on the sidelines.

Adding to the debt issue is the $2.5 billion in perpetual preferred stock Dow Chemical sold to the Rohm & Haas family trust and Rohm’s other large shareholder, Paulson & Co. While the preferred stock sale prevents Dow Chemical from borrowing more money against the bridge loan, it also has a high price: a 7% cash dividend, in addition to an 8% payment-in-kind dividend.

Then there are the asset sales. Before the settlement, Rohm & Haas (and its investors) had pushed Dow Chemical to sell assets to raise cash to pay for the deal. But that prospect threatened the company with the loss of cash-flow generators. With the settlement, Dow Chemical no longer will try to sell its Agricultural Sciences business, one of the company’s top performers and a business valued at roughly $7.7 billion. Dow had been so intent on keeping the business that it didn’t loop in potential buyers like Syngenta, and instead discussed a stake in the business to private equity firms. But Citigroup’s Juvekar said Dow Chemical will have to sell assets anyway:

“Dow plans to pay down the outstanding $10 billion bridge loan by the end of year 1. That sounds aggressive to us since $3.8 billion of the repayment is predicated upon successfully divesting certain businesses, such as its 45% stake in a Dutch petrochemical refinery Total Raffinaderij Nederland, its equity stakes in olefins and derivatives businesses in Southeast Asia, and ROH’s Morton Salt business.”

He went on calculate that with the sales, the company would lose $760 million of earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.

Rohm & Haas’s family trust, which threw roughly half its profits from the merger into more Dow stock, is making a vote of confidence in Dow Chemical. As in Shakespeare, we must wait for the next act to see if that confidence is justified.

11 March 2009

Dow To Sell Assets And Cut Jobs


As Originally Posted at Bloomberg

Dow plans to raise about $4 billion by selling assets, including at least $1.5 billion from Rohm & Haas’s Morton Salt unit, Dow Chief Executive Officer Andrew Liveris said yesterday. The company will issue $4.3 billion of debt and cut costs by $400 million more than previously estimated, partly by eliminating an additional 3,500 jobs, mostly at Rohm & Haas, Liveris said.

Liveris sought new terms for the buyout after a joint venture with Kuwait collapsed, depriving Dow of $9 billion and prompting debt downgrades. Rohm & Haas investors will get $78 a share as originally agreed, except for the two largest shareholders, who will receive partial payment in securities. That cuts Dow’s cash cost by as much as $3 billion and contributes to a 7.8 percent higher deal price of $16.5 billion.

“There are still concerns about the financial viability of Dow, and the fact they still agreed to pay $78 a share to the individual shareholders was a bit of a disappointment,” said Gene Pisasale, who helps manage $13 billion including Dow shares, at PNC Capital in Baltimore. “That is a pretty rich price.”

Dow refused to complete the all-cash purchase in January, saying the company wouldn’t be viable because of slumping demand and increased debt. Rohm & Haas sued, and the companies reached the new accord after delaying a trial in Georgetown, Delaware.

Shares Rise

Dow, based in Michigan along with Midland furniture manufacturer Case Systems, rose 8.5 percent, at 4:15 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Philadelphia-based Rohm & Haas climbed 5.4 percent.

“This is a favorable resolution for Rohm & Haas because the shareholders are getting exactly what they were promised,” said Dmitry Silversteyn, an analyst at Longbow Research in Independence, Ohio.

Under the revised agreement, which is set to close on April 1, Dow will pay a so-called ticking fee of 8 percent a year, or $100 million a month, from Jan. 10 to closing, contributing to the higher deal price, Chief Financial Officer Geoffery Merszei said yesterday.

The Haas family trusts and Paulson Co., the largest shareholders, will exchange some of their stock for $2.5 billion in preferred Dow shares, and the Haas family may take an additional $500 million in equity at Dow’s discretion.

Interest Payments

Interest payments on the preferred shares will reduce annual earnings by as much as 20 cents a share compared with debt financing, Merszei said.

Dow is paying 15.3 times Rohm & Haas’s estimated earnings before interest, taxes and other items, which is “expensive” and delays value creation until 2015, David Begleiter, a New York-based analyst at Deutsche Bank AG, said today in a report. Dow’s increased debt prompted him to cut his price target for Dow shares. He maintained his “hold” rating.

“While the high price tag for the deal is already discounted in Dow’s low valuation, we would need to see debt reduction to be more positive on Dow’s shares,” Begleiter said.

Dow will need to draw only $9.5 billion of a $12.5 billion bridge loan to finance the deal because of the latest equity investments, Merszei said. In addition, Dow has a $3 billion equity investment from Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. and a $1 billion investment by the Kuwait Investment Authority.

Bridge Loan

By June, the issuance of long-term debt will help cut the bridge loan to $4 billion, and asset sales will help Dow repay the entire amount within a year, Merszei said.

The revised agreement and the asset-sale plan “provide some support for an investment-grade credit rating,” Moody’s Investors Service said today in a statement. “However, Dow will need to take additional actions over the next six to 12 months to ensure that they will be able to return credit metrics to levels that would support a solid investment grade rating.”

Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s cut Dow’s ratings on Dec. 29, after the Kuwait deal failed. S&P reduced Dow’s rating to BBB, two grades above junk, from A-. Moody’s cut Dow from A3 to Baa1, three levels above junk.

Bonds of the two companies fell. Rohm & Haas’s 6 percent notes due in September 2017 dropped 2.99 cents on the dollar today in New York, according to Trace, the bond reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. The yield was 9.1 percent. Dow’s 6 percent notes due in October 2012 fell 2.3 cents on the dollar to 83.3 cents, yielding 11.9 percent, according to Trace.

Salt Unit

Dow has six bidders for Morton Salt, the biggest U.S. salt producer, and the unit will be sold soon after the merger is complete, Liveris said. Selling stakes in a Dutch oil-refining business and in Southeast Asian olefins ventures will raise about $1.5 billion, Liveris said. Other businesses worth about $1 billion also will be sold, he said.

Dow plans to save $1.3 billion by combining purchasing operations, sharing services and closing duplicate plants and research facilities, Liveris said. The latest job cuts bring the total at both companies to 10,000, he said. The combined company will spend $1.6 billion a year on research, among the biggest budgets in the industry, he said.

Acquiring Rohm & Haas was a key part of Liveris’s effort to transform Dow from a commodity producer into one of the largest makers of specialty products, such as material for electronics and paints, which command higher profit margins. The combined companies earned $1.06 billion last year on sales of $67.1 billion.

Controlling ‘Destiny’

“This deal is strategic and it positions Dow for the future,” Liveris said. “We are back in control of our own destiny.”

Dow is pursuing through arbitration more than $2.5 billion in restitution from Kuwait’s Petroleum Industries Co. for backing out of an agreement to buy a 50 percent stake in the basic plastics unit, the world’s largest maker of polyethylene plastic. Dow isn’t aggressively pursuing damages against the nation in case it wants to restart the aborted K-Dow joint venture, he said.

Other state-owned petroleum companies also are interested in buying the plastics stake, Liveris said.

09 December 2008

Dow Renegotiates Venture With Kuwait

Dow Chemical Co. renegotiated a deal to split off some of its chemical plants into a joint venture with Kuwait Petroleum Corp., accepting a lower price for the assets it will contribute.

While Dow Chemical will get about $500 million less than it originally planned, analysts expressed relief that the deal is going through at all, given the turmoil in the chemical industry.

Dow will use the $9 billion in cash generated by the asset sale to expand its higher-profit specialty chemicals, in part through its planned $15.3 billion purchase of Rohm & Haas Co., which makes coatings and electronic materials. Investors had worried that the latter deal would be derailed if the Kuwaiti joint venture fell through, but Andrew Liveris, Dow's chief executive, said he expects to close the acquisition early next year.
New Environment

Chemicals producers have been battered this year, first by soaring oil prices and then by the global economic slowdown. Kuwait Petroleum said last month that the Kuwaiti government asked it to review the terms of the joint venture, which involves 15 production locations, scattered in North America, Latin America and Europe. The companies originally announced plans for the venture last year.

Under the new terms, Dow will get a total of $9 billion -- about $500 million less than it originally planned. Of that total, $7.5 billion will be in a direct cash payment. In addition, both Dow and Kuwait Petroleum, as shareholders, will also receive a special cash contribution of $1.5 billion. The money for the cash contribution, which wasn't part of the original deal, will be borrowed by the joint-venture company.

The reduced price, approved by the Kuwaiti government last week, reflects the turmoil in the chemical industry as the global economic slowdown dries up demand for chemical products, Mr. Liveris said in an interview Monday.

"The economic recession that's in place means that it's going to be tougher for this business in the next few years," he said.

"In this environment, it's a positive that they were able to complete any kind of transaction," said Frank Mitsch, managing director of BB&T Capital Markets in New York.

The joint venture is a major part of Dow's effort to shift its operations away from manufacturing low-margin basic chemicals, a business that requires a steady supply of low-cost oil and natural gas. Also, the deal with Kuwait is expected to give Dow preferential access to feedstock for new projects the two companies work on together in the future.

Dow and Kuwait Petroleum will each own 50% of the joint venture. The joint venture, which will be called K-Dow Petrochemicals, will begin operations by the start of 2009.

The companies said the Dow businesses going into joint venture had a revised enterprise value of about $17.4 billion, down from $19 billion.

Among the plants Dow is putting into the joint venture are those that produce polyethylene, polypropylene and polycarbonate, commodity chemicals that have come under intense competition from producers in energy-rich developing countries.

Under the revised deal, K-Dow will also include two existing joint ventures between Dow and Kuwait Petroleum's subsidiary Petrochemical Industries Co.: MEGlobal, which makes ethylene glycol, and Equipolymers, a supplier of PET (polyethylene terephthalate) resins. That will push the venture's expected annual revenue to $15 billion, up from $11 billion under the original deal.

Amid a steep selloff on Wall Street, Dow shares slipped 62 to $17.93. Overall, demand for chemicals is waning as manufacturing-intense economies, such as China's, slow down. Chemical giant BASF said last month it planned to temporarily close 80 plants world-wide and cut output as much as 25%. Dow has said it expects weak demand to continue at least until the second half of next year and is reviewing options to cut costs.