Lafarge Cement plant |
Olusegun Osunkeye, chairman of Lafarge Wapco told shareholders at a meeting that the Nigerian cement firm would pay the Lafarge group $200 million in cash and 1.4 billion in new shares to buy Lafarge's South African unit and other of its Nigerian businesses in order to combine them.
After the merger, the new combined entity will be renamed Lafarge Africa Plc and listed on the Nigerian bourse with a market capitalisation of around $3 billion. Lafarge group will own 73 percent of the combined entity.
Lafarge Wapco also won shareholder approval to raise 100 billion naira in debt or equity on domestic or international capital markets.
The consolidation will enable Lafarge to accelerate growth on the African continent and expand its product offering in South Africa and across the region, the cement maker has said as a reason for the merging both businesses.
Lafarge faces intense competition in Africa, especially from arch rival Dangote Cement, owned by Africa's richest man, Aliko Dangote. The company, Nigeria's biggest with a market capitalisation of around $24 billion, is set to roll out cement plants across Africa.
Lafarge owns 60 percent of Lafarge Wapco, its listed subsidiary in Nigeria, 58.6 percent of another Nigerian listed company Ashaka Cement Plc, and 100 percent of the Atlas cement company. It has joint ownership with Holcim of privately held United Cement Company of Nigeria. It owns 100 percent of the Lafarge South African business.
The deal is expected to close in the second half of the year. It now needs regulatory approval.
Also shareholders on Wednesday approved an increase in dividend payment to 3.30 naira per share for the 2013 financial year, up from 1.20 naira paid in 2012.
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