Business

Saudi giant makes offer for Barloworld

A unit of Saudi Arabia’s Zahid Group and its local partners offered to buy all shares in South Africa’s Barloworld. 

A group that includes Gulf Falcon — a wholly owned unit of Zahid — and Entsha, an entity linked to Barloworld CEO Dominic Sewela, has made an offer of R120 per share, Barloworld said in a statement Wednesday. The stock surged as much as 19% in Johannesburg. 

The offer won’t be reduced by the R3.10 dividend the firm declared on November 22, which takes the total so-called “value unlock” to R123.10 per share.

This translates into an 87% premium to Barloworld’s 30-day volume-weighted average price before it told shareholders to exercise caution in trading in April. 

“Zahid Group is a long-term shareholder of Barloworld and believes in the fundamental strengths of Barloworld,” the company said. The announcement confirms an earlier Bloomberg report.

The Johannesburg-based firm that is the African distributor of Caterpillar equipment will be taken private if the deal goes ahead, it said.

Middle Eastern firms have increasingly sought investments in Africa, jockeying for influence with established players like China and France. ACWA Power, a Riyadh-based company, has signed a memorandum of understanding to invest $10 billion in South Africa’s renewable-energy industry over the next decade, while Dubai-based logistics company DP World operates nine ports on the continent.

The Saudi group, a distributor of heavy equipment machinery, started buying Barloworld shares four years ago. Zahid Tractor and Heavy Machinery Co., owns 18.9% of the South African company.

Barloworld is the official Caterpillar dealer in several African nations, including Zambia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Malawi, Angola and South Africa.

It also has a business in Russia that’s been subject to an internal investigation into possible export violations.

Newsletter

Top JSE indices

1D
1M
6M
1Y
5Y
MAX
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Comments