The Dutch-Swedish paint maker AkzoNobel announced today that it was selling its North American decorative paints division in a billion-dollar deal to the US-based company PPG, and would now focus more on Europe and “high-growth markets.”
“AkzoNobel announces the divestment of its North American Decorative Paints business to PPG Industries for the value of $1.05 billion,” it said in a statement released in Amsterdam.
Cash proceeds of the sale will amount to around $875 million, the statement said.
“AkzoNobel has made a strategic choice to focus its decorative paints business area on key markets in Europe and its strong position in high-growth regions,” it added.
These regions in particular included Asian countries like China, India and Singapore as well as Latin America, company spokesman Jeroen Pul said.
He said the deal was expected to be finalised by the second quarter of 2013.
The deal included AkzoNobel’s decorative paints businesses in the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico.
The top company’s decorative paints businesses in North America over the last four years made a successful turnaround, handing the company revenues of $1.5 billion in 2011, or seven per cent of its total revenue that year, AkzoNobel said.
The company Chief Executive Tom Buchner praised the turnaround but said AkzoNobel was convinced “that decorative paints can get better returns from our leading positions in Europe and high growth markets.”
“This agreement is a good outcome for all stakeholders,” he said.
AkzoNobel, the world’s top paint maker, employed 5,000 workers at eight sites in the North American region and 55,000 people worldwide.
Headquartered in Pittsburgh, PPG produces a range of coatings including for the aerospace and shipping industries and operates in 60 countries around the world.
The deal, said PPG chief Charles E Bunch was “an attractive way to significantly increase our scale in the North American paint market.”
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