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No terms were given for the Perez y Cia deal, which will increase APM Terminals’ container ports to 74 from 63 including terminals in Colombia, Brazil and Mexico.
Reuters
Copenhagen
Port operator APM Terminals, part of Denmark’s A.P. Moller-Maersk, is buying 11 container ports from Spanish shipping and logistics group Perez y Cia to boost its presence in emerging markets and better serve bigger container vessels.
No terms were given for the deal, which will increase APM Terminals’ container ports to 74 from 63 including terminals in Colombia, Brazil and Mexico, but Nordea Markets estimated an enterprise value of around €1.35bn ($1.5bn), based on similar deals and other companies in the sector.
APM Terminals chief executive Kim Fejfer said yesterday the deal would make the company better prepared to handle new alliances among container shipping companies and their new bigger vessels.
The deal comes a day before A.P. Moller-Maersk hosts a day of briefings for investors and analysts, when it may present aims for its business units after scrapping detailed long-term targets due to the commodity price collapse.
Maersk will likely be asked how it will deal with pressures on the container shipping industry due to low freight rates and slowing growth in China. The ports deal may be part of the group’s response to those pressures, if it increases its clout in dealing with rival shipping operators and allows it greater control of overall costs.
The shipping and oil group, in the process of paying out dividends worth 42.4bn Danish crowns ($6.4bn), the highest ever in Denmark, has also said it would be interested in buying oil assets for example as low crude prices undercut the value of oil and gas fields.
APM Terminals is the world’s third largest container port operator after Singapore state-owned operator PSA International and Hutchison Port Holdings, a unit of Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison Holdings.
“It seems like a healthy bolt-on purchase, in an industry with much more stability than some of the other of Maersk’s business areas,” analyst Jacob Pedersen at Sydbank said.
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