Akzo Nobel Spinoff Nouryon Seeks Price Rises to Offset Higher Raw Material Costs
24 December 2018 - 9:59PM
Dow Jones News
By Nina Trentmann
Dutch chemicals company Nouryon BV plans to continue raising
prices, boost productivity and increase production capacity in
preparation for a potential stock-market listing.
Amsterdam-based Nouryon was spun out of coatings and paint maker
Akzo Nobel NV and acquired by U.S. private-equity house Carlyle
Group LP and Singapore's GIC Private Ltd. this year, employing
about 10,000 people world-wide.
Similar to peers including German chemicals firms BASF SE and
Covestro AG, Nouryon has been suffering from rising raw material
and energy costs over the course of the year. The chlorine
manufacturer, which also produces performance chemicals used in
athletic shoe soles and wall paint, is looking to further hike
prices to offset those cost increases, Chief Financial Officer
Renier Vree said in an interview with CFO Journal.
Nouryon has increased prices for its products on average by 7%
since the beginning of the year, said Mr. Vree, adding that these
increases don't suffice to compensate for the rise in raw material
costs.
"I think there is room for more," he said. "I am the type of CFO
that likes to get involved in these questions." Mr. Vree declined
to comment on how much the company could raise prices in 2019.
In about 80% of product categories that it is competing in,
Nouryon comes first or second in terms of sales, providing the
company with leverage over its customers, said Markus Mayer, an
analyst at Baader Bank AG in Munich.
"Nouryon has a lot of pricing power, especially in areas like
chlorine and caustic soda," he said. Caustic soda is used for
manufacturing pulp, paper, soap and detergents, among other
products.
A potentially worsening of the global economic outlook -- driven
in part by the trade dispute between the U.S. and China and events
such as Britain's exit from the European Union -- might make that
task more challenging. Everyone in the industry is trying to raise
prices now, Mr. Mayer said. "The move might be met with resistance
from customers."
Mr. Vree next year aims to raise Nouryon's productivity and to
reallocate capital spending toward new manufacturing sites for its
specialty chemicals business. Forty percent of the company's plants
are running at full capacity, he said. Mr. Vree didn't provide more
specifics on where Nouryon could expand its footprint. The company
is producing at 68 sites in countries around the world, including
Brazil, the U.S., Germany, Sweden and China.
These measures could help ready the company for a change in
ownership. "Down the road, the idea is that there could be an
initial public offering," said Mr. Vree, adding that the listing
could happen in five years or less. He didn't provide more
specifics.
Capital expenditures at Nouryon are set to remain stable at
about 6% of annual sales in 2019, Mr. Vree said.
Nouryon is looking for ways to offset wage inflation in the U.S.
and in Europe, he said. Labor costs will rise 3% to 3.5% in 2019,
according to Mr. Vree. The company has lifted wages in various
countries, including the U.S., where salaries this year went up by
an average of 3.3%.
Back-office functions like finance, human resources, information
technology and legal contribute to the cost-saving efforts, Mr.
Vree said. The chemicals maker is in the process of centralizing
some of its accounting tasks in three main shared services centers
in Mexico, China and the Netherlands.
Mr. Vree declined to comment on what these changes would mean
for the company's nearly 500 finance employees. The company didn't
disclose how many HR, IT and procurement workers it employs in its
shared services centers. These are separate from the finance
workers, a spokesman said.
Write to Nina Trentmann at nina.trentmann@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 24, 2018 05:44 ET (10:44 GMT)
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