Hapag-Lloyd agrees merger terms with shipping peer UASC

Industry: ,    2016-06-29

German container shipping line Hapag-Lloyd AG (HLAG.DE) has agreed on a merger deal with United Arab Shipping Company (UASC), creating a group with an estimated value of 7 to 8 billion euros($7.7-8.9 billion), as both seek to weather a market downturn.

Hapag-Lloyd said its supervisory board had approved the deal, which would see it take all shares in Kuwait-based UASC, majority-held by the government of Qatar. Hapag-Lloyd’s anchor shareholders and UASC shareholders still need to give consent.

An extraordinary general meeting of UASC will be held in Dubai on June 29, Hapag-Lloyd said in a statement.

Hapag-Lloyd shares were up by 3.4 percent at 18 euros at 1455 GMT, easing from an earlier high of 19.2 euros.

Container shipping has seen a wave mergers and acquisitions, particularly in Asia, as companies try to grab a bigger share of a depressed market. The industry is suffering its worst downturn since its origins in the 1950s and 1960s due to a combination of weak consumer demand and overcapacity

Plans for the deal were unveiled in April. It received backing from UASC shareholders earlier this month.

Hamburg-based Hapag-Lloyd initially said talks were based on its shareholders owning 72 percent of the combined business.

In a presentation to analysts last month Hapag-Lloyd placed itself fifth globally in terms of carrier capacity, and UASC in eleventh place.

A merger would consolidate the group’s combined 5th place and get it much closer to the number four – COSCO Container Lines [COSCO.UL] – according to the presentation.

Besides full mergers companies are also seeking alliances and vessel sharing arrangements to pool trips and save money.

Hapag-Lloyd last month unveiled a new alliance due to start in April 2017, which it said UASC would join if the merger plans were successful.

Hapag-Lloyd merged with Chile’s Compania Sud Americana de Vapores (CSAV) in 2014, helping it to swing to profit last year, but its shareholders still view it as too small to thrive.

Through the UASC merger, it would gain access to bigger ships on the important Asia to Europe trade route. UASC for its part would gain wider access to trans-Atlantic and trans-Pacific loops, where Hapag-Lloyd is strong.

(Reporting by Vera Eckert, editing by Tina Bellon and Alexandra Hudson).

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