Morris Township, N.J.—In a move which makes
its already large nylon fibers business even bigger, Honeywell has acquired the
fiber business of BASF. Honeywell announced definitive agreements with BASF for
two transactions that are part of a planned restructuring of Honeywell’s
Specialty Materials unit. Under terms of the agreements, Honeywell will sell its
engineering plastics business to BASF and will acquire BASF’s nylon fibers
business. Honeywell will receive $170 million in cash and all of BASF’s nylon
fiber business at closing. Honeywell will pay $80 million to BASF within one
year of the transaction’s close.
Significant synergies will result from the
integration of BASF’s nylon fiber business with Honeywell’s existing nylon
business, noted Nance Dicciani, president and CEO of Honeywell Specialty
Materials. Honeywell expects increased utilization of its Hopewell, Va.,
caprolactum manufacturing facility that will supply nylon feedstock to the
combined business as well as its fiber and plastics customers. The company added
that it will retain its nylon films business and all of its specialty chemicals
operations. The transactions are expected to close in the first half of this
year, subject to regulatory approval in several jurisdictions.
For Honeywell, the result of the transaction
is cash and a stronger nylon business that will be greater than the sum of its
individual parts, noted Dicciani. “The combination of Honeywell’s and
BASF’s nylon fiber business will result in greater economies of scale and
increased cost synergies providing a stronger, more valuable business with more
strategic opportunities and flexibility in the future,” she said. “This
transaction is a significant step in our plans to rationalize the business by
improving its current financial performance and long-term growth prospects.
“The plastics transaction will allow us to exit a non-core compounding
business,” she added. “The nylon transaction represents a unique opportunity
to create a fully integrated business with the scale and synergies to make it a
more valuable asset with the flexibility to serve the needs of both fiber and
plastics customers.”
BASF is selling its nylon fibers business to
ensure its long-term competitiveness as part of a larger entity. “With these
portfolio changes, BASF is strategically realigning and enhancing its market
position in plastics,” said Dr. John Feldman, the member of the board of
executive directors of BASF Aktiengesel-lschaft responsible for the Plastics
& Fibers segment. As a result of the transaction, BASF will enhance its
position as a leading global supplier of engineering plastics. The agreement
includes manufacturing facilities, research and development assets, and sales
and technical service locations worldwide. The business being acquired includes
about 500 Honeywell personnel.
“With this acquisition, we are bringing
together the best teams in the industry,” said Raimar Jahn, president of
BASF’s Performance Polymers division. In 2001, Honeywell’s engineering
plastics business had sales of about $350 million, while BASF’s nylon fibers
group sales were approximately $350 million for the same year. Sales for
Honeywell’s retained nylon business in 2001 totaled nearly $700 million. The
nylon transaction offers significant economies of scale and costreduction
opportunities for Honeywell: a robust pipeline of products, including its Anso
carpet fiber brand; and strong customer channel access, noted Dicciani. It will
include fiber and polymerization manufacturing plants, research facilities and
sales offices in North America from both companies, with manufacturing plants in
South Carolina, Virginia, Canada and China.
The businesses currently employ approximately
1,600 BASF personnel and 2,500 Honeywell personnel. The transaction includes a
nylon carpet fiber business that serves the commercial, automotive and
residential markets; textile products, including a diversified line of nylon
yarns for apparel fabrics; nylon, for automotive headliner fabrics; and solution
dyed Zeftron 200 nylon, for upholstery fabrics. BASF’s fiber intermediates
plants in Freeport, Tex., and Enka, N.C., as well as its related facilities
outside North America (except the Hua Yuan plant in Shanghai, China), are not
included in the sale.
Honeywell’s global engineering plastics
portfolio includes nylon, polyester and alloys offered in the Capron (nylon 6
and nylon 6,6), Petra (post-consumer recycled polyester) and Nypel
(post-industrial nylon 6) product lines. The agreement covers polymerization and
compounding facilities, research and development assets and sales and technical
service locations in North America, Europe and Asia. The transactions portend a
brighter future for Honeywell’s Specialty materials group, according to
Dicciani. “These changes highlight our commitment to focus on higher-margin
growth opportunities that can contribute to the overall profitability of
Honeywell. We are confident that, with the transaction, we are on the right
track.” —Louis Iannaco