Braskem SA, one of the world’s top petrochemicals makers, received an offer of as much as 37.5 billion reais ($7.6 billion) from Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. and Apollo Global Management, according to people familiar with the matter.
(Bloomberg) — Braskem SA, one of the world’s top petrochemicals makers, received an offer of as much as 37.5 billion reais ($7.6 billion) from Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. and Apollo Global Management, according to people familiar with the matter.
Discussions are still in early stages, according to the people, who requested anonymity to discuss the confidential matter. One of them said the offer was non-binding.
The company surged the most on record in Brazilian trading after a columnist for Brazilian newspaper Folha de S.Paulo first reported on the proposal. The offer of 47 reais a share was more than double Braskem’s market value before the report sent the shares up.
Adnoc, as the Abu Dhabi-based oil and gas producer is known, has been diversifying geographically and adding business lines, growing in power and influence even amid climate change. Acquiring Braskem could be difficult because its two biggest shareholders, Novonor SA and Petroleo Brasileiro SA, haven’t always seen eye to eye, pulling a planned share sale last year because they couldn’t agree on price.
Novonor has not received any proposal from potential interested parties “that implies a material or binding evolution in discussions,” according to a filing of Braskem on Friday. Apollo declined to comment. Adnoc and Petrobras didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Braskem shares were briefly halted in Sao Paulo after jumping as much as 42%, bringing its total market capitalization to 20 billion reais. The share closed the session up 24% to 23.76 reais. Braskem’s 2033 bonds also jumped, climbing 3 cents to 98.4 cents on the dollar on the news, according to Trace data.
A deal would be “a major positive for shareholders,” said Malcolm Dorson, a portfolio manager at Mirae Asset Global Investments in New York. “The idea of Apollo, from the angle of a value-creating financial manager, and Adnoc, as a best-in-class operator, teaming up could create value for shareholders.”
In an interview in March, Petrobras Chief Executive Officer Jean Paul Prates said the company was considering raising its own stake in Braskem, potentially reversing a long-time strategy to offload its holding. Novonor is formerly known as Odebrecht, the construction conglomerate whose corruption scandal brought down several prominent political figures in Latin America.
Brazilian newspapers including O Globo and Valor Economico have reported over the past year that Apollo was in talks to acquire Braskem.
–With assistance from Maria Elena Vizcaino and Zijia Song.
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
©2023 Bloomberg L.P.