
Gypsum industry news
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23 March 2020Australia: Boral, already dealing with financial difficulty even before the coronavirus pandemic, has withdrawn its full-year profit guidance and warned that it will likely have to re-work its complex wallboard buyout transaction with USG / Knauf.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.
Australia: The board of directors of Boral has announced that Boral CEO and managing director Mike Kane will declare his retirement after delivering the company’s whole-year 2020 (1 July 2019 to 30 June 2020) results in mid-August 2020. Kane said, “I am proud of Boral’s people and I thank them for their continued support as well as the support of our customers. I remain committed to Boral and look forward to delivering Boral’s full-year 2020 results and facilitating a smooth leadership transition.”
The Sydney Herald newspaper reported that Boral revised its whole-year net profit forecast up from US$214m to US$228m, which would be down by 19% from US$281m in the Australian financial year 2019.
Knauf Australia denies sale rumours of Bundaberg wallboard plant
17 December 2019Australia: Gavin Burton, the managing director of Knauf Australia, has denied speculation in the local press that the company was planning to sell its Bundaberg gypsum wallboard plant in Queensland. Burton told the Bundaberg NewsMail newspaper that the company was ‘very happy’ with its plant.
The response followed speculation in the Australian newspaper that Knauf might want to sell assets in the country in order to preserve a 50% stake in USG Boral’s business in Australia and New Zealand. Germany’s Knauf acquired USG in April 2019. In August 2019 Boral said it had entered into an agreement with Germany’s Knauf to form an expanded 50:50 plasterboard joint venture in Asia and for Boral to return to 100% ownership of USG Boral Australia & New Zealand. However, this was subject to regulatory approval.
Lone Star Funds considering acquisition of Boral
18 October 2019Australia: US-based private equity company Lone Star Funds is considering acquiring Boral, according to the Australian newspaper. Lone Star Funds purchased building materials manufacturer Forterra from Heidelberg Cement. Boral later formed a joint venture with Forterra Brick in the US in 2016. In a separate deal Lone Star Funds later purchased German building materials producer Xella. Despite growing revenue from continuing operations, Boral’s net profit after tax fell by 7% year-on-year to US$301m in the year to 30 June 2019.
USG-Boral’s earnings down on poor market in South Korea
29 August 2019Australia: USG-Boral’s earnings have fallen due to a poor construction market in South Korea. Its earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) fell by 6% year-on-year to US$170m in the financial year to 30 June 2019 from US$181m in the previous year. Its revenue grew by 2% to US$1.08bn from US$1.06bn. The joint venture said that, excluding South Korea, earnings were ‘steady’ as lower earnings from Indonesia, China and the Philippines were offset by increased contributions from Thailand, Vietnam and India, as well as a continued strong contribution from Australia.
The company also announced that Boral has entered into an agreement with Germany’s Knauf to form an expanded 50:50 plasterboard joint venture in Asia and for Boral to return to 100% ownership of USG Boral Australia & New Zealand. Completion of the deal is subject to regulatory approval. It follows the acquisition of USG by Germany’s Knauf in early 2019.
Australia/US: USG-Boral will resume 100% ownership of its Australia and New Zealand gypsum wallboard operations, subject to a call option for Knauf to buy back 50% within five years.
Boral CEO Michael Kane has commended Boral’s Sheetrock brand’s substantially strengthened position by comparison to that at the time of Knauf’s US$7bn acquisition of USG in April 2019, since which time Knauf has held 50% of USG-Boral’s gypsum wallboard business in Australia and New Zealand.
Boral will continue its joint operations with Knauf across Asia, at the centre of which are USG-Boral Asia’s purchase of Knauf Asian Plasterboard for US$533m, and its sale of its Middle Eastern ventures to Knauf for US$50m.
Australia: BGC Australia is considering selling its gypsum wallboard and fibre cement businesses. Roger Brynjulfsen, the general manager of BGC Plasterboard, told customers in a letter that the company's board of directors had brought forward plans for a possible sale of BGC Fibre Cement and BGC Plasterboard, with evaluations under way, according to the Business News newspaper. The company wants to sell both businesses as going concerns with the new owner to continue to supply plasterboard and fibre cement to BGC's existing customers. It is also considering selling parts of the business or changing its operating model.
BGC previously tried to sell its building materials subsidiaries in 2018. However, it deferred the sale in February2019 due to poor market conditions. It appointed a new chief executive officer (CEO), Daniel Cooper, in late June 2019.