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Belarus: The government is in talks with Ireland’s CRH to sell Krasnoselskstroymaterialy. Anatoly Kalinin, the Deputy Prime Minister of Belarus, told the Belarusian Telegraph Agency that the government wants US$200 for the state-owned cement producer but that CRH wants to pay less or buy a share of the business. Negotiations are on going.
Nigeria: BUA Group is ready to commission a new 1.5Mt/yr cement production line at its Sokoto Cement plant in the northwest of the country. The upgrade will increase production at the unit to 0.5Mt/yr, according to the Vanguard newspaper. The company exports cement from the plant to neighbouring Niger. The new line will run on coal and natural gas. The cement producer also operates a 3.5Mt/yr plant at Okpella & Obu in Edo state in the mid-west of the country.
Mexico: Grupo Cementos de Chihuahua (GCC) has taken out a new US$400m loan to reduce its interest payments. The loan has a term of five years with a margin of 1.25 – 2% on Libor, based on the debt / earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) ratio, according to the El Financiero newspaper. The initial margin will be 1.75%. The loan has been supplied by BBVA Bancomer, Banco Nacional de México, JP Morgan Chase Bank and the Bank of Nova Scotia. It will also be used for general corporate purposes.
India: The Kerala High Court is investigating how files have disappeared from its premises regarding a corruption case into Malabar Cement. The files were part of a 2015 petition, seeking a Central Bureau of Investigation probe into alleged instances of corruption in the cement producer, according to the Press Trust of India. Justice B Sudheendra Kumar described the situation as ‘alarming.’
In early 2017 the Vigilance and Anti-Corruption Bureau, a corruption body in the state of Kerala, arrested Prakash Joseph, a legal officer at Malabar Cements, in relation to a loss of US$0.4m. Previous to this in mid-2016 the Vigilance and Anti-Corruption Bureau arrested K Padmakumar, the managing director of Malabar Cements, on charges of corruption and irregularity.
India: UltraTech Cement’s costs are growing over its offer to buy Binani Cement. A legal counsel in the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) told the Business Standard newspaper that the subsidiary of Aditya Birla Group is liable to pay lenders around US$0.22m/day in additional interest until the takeover is completed. Any decision made by the NCLT will still have to go before the Supreme Court further delaying the process.
UltraTech Cement made a direct bid of US$1.12bn for the bankrupt Binani Cement following an auction in March 2018 that was originally won by Dalmia Bharat. However, Dalmia Bharat’s offer did not include paying interest to lenders. Binani Cement’s insolvency resolution process has overrun its 270-day time frame by nearly two months.