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Indian-origin steel tycoon bails out another UK plant

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Press Trust of India London
Indian-origin steel tycoon Sanjeev Gupta has come to the rescue of yet another ailing UK plant after he agreed a deal to acquire Britain's largest producer of merchant bar used for shaping steel products.

Under the deal, Gupta's Liberty House group will acquire 100 per cent of the share capital of Scunthorpe-based Caparo Merchant Bar plc (CMB) from the administrators of Caparo Industries.

It forms part of Liberty's wider strategy for the UK's steel industry, having taken over large parts of Tata Steel's British operations and previously acquiring much of the Caparo engineering business when the units owned by NRI industrialist Lord Swraj Paul went into administration in 2015.
 

The latest acquisition is based on the expectation of reaching a final agreement with the pension trustee concerning Caparo Industries' 1,700-member pension scheme, and other key creditors of the business, Liberty House said on the deal struck over the weekend.

"CMB remained solvent despite its parent, Caparo Industries Plc, going into administration in late 2015, and since then the directors of the company have kept the business in profit. However, CMB remained coupled with the Caparo 1988 Pension Scheme, which had the effect of restricting CMB's ability to develop its own financial flexibility. This placed the solvency of the company at risk potentially jeopardising creditors and the pension benefits of its employees," a company statement said today.

CMB employs 145 workers at two fully-automated rolling mills in Scunthorpe, east England, and includes a range of steel bars and light sections for the construction, energy, infrastructure, oil & gas, shipbuilding and transport industries.

Liberty House said the acquisition will complement its already substantial network of steel plants in the UK and enable the company to supply the market with an extensive range of steel products.

"CMB fits perfectly into our GreenSteel vision for the UK steel industry and completes our product offering to the market. We can now supply an extensive range of both flat and long products, with steel mills in all parts of the country. This will enable us to compete more effectively and win market share from imports, helping re-build the UK Steel industry," Gupta, executive chairman of Liberty House Group, said.

"This is a business with a long history, a great reputation and a very strong order book. We are confident we can provide it with a secure future for the benefit all stakeholders. I am especially pleased about the prospect of being able to assist the Caparo Industries pension scheme more widely and improve outcomes for many more of its 1,700 members. I am also delighted to welcome today 145 new colleagues to the Liberty family."

"We have been working with the pension scheme trusteeto deliver a solution which we believe is deliverable although this area is complex and there is still execution risk," Liberty Industries CFO Derek O'Reilly explained.

However, to prevent the business going into administration, and losing all possibility of a pension solution, it was essential that we immediately acquired the business to provide the possibility to protect CMB employees' benefits.

"We are also trying to find a solution that gives many other Caparo Industries pension scheme members - currently in PPF assessment - the chance to achieve better benefits than would otherwise have been available."

Matthew Hammond, one of the joint administrators of Caparo Industries Plc (in administration) and certain subsidiaries, said the administratorshaveworked with thepension Trustee(including their advisers and stakeholders), CMB and its other financial stakeholdersover many months to explore the options for a solvent rescue of CMB and a better outcome for the Pension Scheme andall other creditors of the Caparo Industries administration estates.

"We are delighted to confirm that, with the cooperation of Tata, the minority shareholder of CMB, we have today completed a sale of the entire share capital of CMB to Liberty. We would like to thank the directors, management team and employees at CMB for theircontinued cooperation over 20 months which enabled the completion of the share sale," Hammond said.

Since mid-2015, Liberty has moved from being largely a trading entity to become one of the UK's largest industrial employers and owner of the country's last aluminium smelter, its largest steel plate mill and largest scrap melting capacity.

It recently completed the acquisition of Tata's speciality steels business - now Liberty Speciality Steels - which supplies high-value steels to automotive, aerospace, industrial and energy clients worldwide.

In leading Liberty through this transformational phase,Guptahas applied his GreenSteel business model, designed to secure a competitive, low-carbon future for metal manufacture, through recycling, use of renewable energy and vertical integration with value-added engineering activities.

Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content

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First Published: Jul 03 2017 | 4:57 PM IST

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