|
A China National Cereals, Oils and Foodstuffs Corporation (COFCO) booth at the Beijing Green and Organic FoodExpo, Nov 27, 2008. [Photo/CFP] |
COFCO Corp, China's largest grain trader, plans a public listing of some of its assets, including a majority stake in Noble Group Ltd's agribusiness unit that it bought this year for $1.5 billion.
The proposed spinoff highlights COFCO's efforts to become a global agricultural producer and distributor, complementing its role as the State-run food supplier for the world's biggest consumer of rice, soybeans and wheat.
The listing could take about three years, according to Chairman Frank Ning, and in the meantime no more major acquisitions are planned "any time soon", he said.
The new entity would include production capacity in South America and the Black Sea, processing, logistics and trading and seed technologies.
COFCO agreed in April to buy a 51 percent stake in the Noble unit after buying a similar-sized stake in Dutch grain trader Nidera Holdings BV two months earlier.
The two transactions were the largest overseas acquisitions in the history of both COFCO and China's grain and vegetable oil industries, the company said in a statement.
"It is taking time to digest the two deals," Ning said on Tuesday, adding the assets will help COFCO become a "leading agricultural company with world-class scale in trade, processing and logistics".
Founded in 1949, COFCO grew through a series of mergers of State food and animal husbandry companies and is now China's biggest food company with 60,000 employees.
It also runs commercial and residential property, tourist resorts, hotels, and financial services that include a commodity futures brokerage, a regional bank and an insurance venture with London-based Aviva Plc. It has seven listed units.
Figures show that China's food demand is rising with its growing economy, and it is now looking further afield to feed a nation with insufficient farming resources and a growing dependence on imports.
The US Department of Agriculture estimates the country is already the biggest soybean buyer and will become the top corn importer by about 2020.
Ning said the acquisitions "will extend COFCO's global reach, enabling it to source soybeans from Argentina through the Nidera supply chain, or buy sugar from Brazil through Noble Agri. It will also help ensure food supply to China".
COFCO provided 60 percent of the funding for the Noble and Nidera investments with the remaining 40 percent coming from a group that includes Chinese private-equity firm Hopu Investment Management Co, Singapore's state-owned investment arm Temasek Holdings, Standard Chartered Private Equity and the World Bank's International Finance Corp.
Bi Mingjian, managing partner of Hopu Investment, considered the acquisitions "an unprecedented opportunity as China's soaring grain consumption will alter the trade landscape, giving opportunity to the rise of a whole new global player".
After the transactions, COFCO's aggregate revenue will be $63.3 billion from total assets worth $57 billion, the company said in a statement. Annual processing capacity will rise to 84 million metric tons and storage capacity will increase to 15 million tons.
|
|
China names 6 SOEs for pilot reforms | Cofco takes a bite out of nation's food insecurity |