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How many staff will LafargeHolcim need?
Written by Peter Edwards
27 May 2015
There was a lot of news out of Lafarge and Holcim this week regarding preparations towards their merger. Just this morning we heard that the partners have entered into a binding agreement with Ireland's CRH regarding the sale of the assets that must be divested. Meanwhile, Lafarge and Holcim have also completed the appointments for the future LafargeHolcim executive committee. Its nine members will be responsible for such tasks as finance, integration, performance and costs, growth and innovation, as well as regional activities in Europe, Asia Pacific, the Middle East and Africa, North America and Latin America.
However, it was other types of personnel that featured in Lafarge and Holcim's earlier press releases. On 19 May 2015 Lafarge came out and announced the first (pre-merger) job losses that will result from the merger. It will cut 380 positions in central and regional corporate roles, with 166 going in its native France. For its part Holcim will make 120 pre-merger job losses, all in Switzerland. Ignoring the clear discrepancy in scale between the different sides, Lafarge and Holcim will have lost at least 500 jobs out of their combined ~130,000. This is just a scratch on the surface, but it does raise an interesting question: How many more jobs will go at LafargeHolcim?
First up are the staff that will go to work for CRH. This probably represents the largest number of staff that will come of LafargeHolcim's books relative to Lafarge and Holcim's current staff levels. According to their 2014 Annual Reports, Lafarge and Holcim employ a combined 81,000 staff in cement roles. Given that they have a combined 425Mt/yr of cement capacity (give or take) this equates to around 190 staff for each 1Mt/yr of capacity.
As the new LafargeHolcim will have control over around 340Mt/yr of cement capacity, we can crudely scale the 190 staff up to 64,600 cement sector staff. This indicates that around 16,400 staff that are currently employed by Lafarge and Holcim will be 'off' to CRH (and others). This leaves 48,100 staff in non-cement roles at LafargeHolcim.
Will more jobs be lost post-merger? Lafarge and Holcim have stated that the new entity will have 115,000 staff. However, with around 42% of future employees employed in non-cement roles - compared to 41% and 34% for Lafarge and Holcim respectively in 2014 - it certainly seems that there could be scope for at least some reduction in overall numbers from LafargeHolcim's non-cement functions. Future job losses could therefore be a possibility, but the exact scale of future consolidations and 'synergies' (if any) will only become apparent post-merger. Maybe LafargeHolcim could end up with around 105,000 to 110,000 staff.
A key time may well be early 2016, when LafargeHolcim will launch a new 'corporate structure.' This term was also used by Lafarge and Holcim in their most recent releases, so further job losses could be on the cards.
One member of LafargeHolcim staff with nothing to worry about now will be Bruno Lafont, current CEO of Lafarge. He received a Euro2.5m bonus this week for his 'key role' in conducting the merger. How LafargeHolcim staff who could be nervous about their jobs will take this remains to be seen.
The Lafarge-Holcim Report from Global Cement is available to order now
Steppe Cement chairman Malcolm Brown to retire
Written by Global Cement staff
27 May 2015
Kazakhstan: Steppe Cement's Malcolm Brown will retire as the non-executive chairman on 28 May 2015 due to health reasons. He does not intend to stand for re-election in the forthcoming AGM. He has served on the board for more than six years, since December 2008 and is a member of the audit and remuneration committees. Brown remains as a shareholder of Steppe Cement. The company is currently searching for an appropriate candidate to replace Brown.
Holcim and Lafarge finalise LafargeHolcim executive committee and CRH deal
Written by Global Cement staff
27 May 2015
Europe: Lafarge and Holcim have completed the appointments for the future executive committee of LafargeHolcim following a recommendation by Eric Olsen, future CEO of the combined group. The future executive committee, under the leadership of Eric Olsen, is composed of:
- Finance - Thomas Aebischer, currently in charge of finance at Holcim;
- Integration, organisation and human resources - Jean-Jacques Gauthier, currently in charge of finance at Lafarge;
- Europe - Roland Köhler, currently in charge of Europe at Holcim;
- Asia Pacific - Ian Thackwray, currently in charge of East Asia Pacific and trading at Holcim;
- Middle-East Africa - Saâd Sebbar, currently in charge of Morocco at Lafarge;
- North America - Alain Bourguignon, previously in charge of North America and the UK at Holcim;
- Latin America - Pascal Casanova, currently in charge of France at Lafarge;
- Performance and cost - Urs Bleisch, currently in charge of corporate functions at Holcim;
- Growth and innovation - Gérard Kuperfarb, currently in charge of innovation at Lafarge.
Following appropriate information-consultation processes with relevant works councils and employee representatives, Lafarge and Holcim have now entered a binding agreement with CRH regarding the sale of several assets. The assets include operations mainly in Europe, Canada, Brazil and the Philippines with an enterprise value of Euro6.5bn. The divestments remain subject to the completion of the merger including the acceptance of Holcim's public exchange offer by the shareholders of Lafarge. The merger is expected to close in July 2015.
Vaishno Cement appoints three directors
Written by Global Cement staff
20 May 2015
India: Vaishno Cement Company Ltd has appointed Nabin Kr Jain, Vineet Agarwal and Kakali Ghosh as non-executive independent directors with effect from 22 April 2015. Further, Vijay Jaideo Poddar, Girdhar S Bansal and Sarita Agarwal, all non-executive independent directors, have resigned from directorship with effect from 22 April 2015.
Kaspar E A Wenger appointed chairman of the board of Holcim (Schweiz) AG
Written by Global Cement staff
20 May 2015
Switzerland: Kaspar E A Wenger has been appointed as the chairman of the board of Holcim (Schweiz) AG. The role follows more than 20 years at Holcim, including more than ten years of operating responsibility for Holcim (Schweiz) AG and the responsibility for Central Europe.
In the framework of the progressing merger between Holcim and Lafarge, Wenger will become designated chairman of the board of Holcim (Schweiz) AG, effective from 30 June 2015. He will relinquish his responsibilities as area manager for Central Europe (Switzerland, South Germany, Italy). Wenger will play a key role in supporting the activities of LafargeHolcim in Switzerland specifically.
Gerd Aufdenblatten, currently CFO of Holcim Central Europe, will replace Wenger and become cluster-CEO. Gerd Aufdenblatten joined Holcim in 2007 and became CFO of Holcim Central Europe in 2013. A successor for the position of CFO will be communicated in due course.