Hyosung to sell its specialty gas unit for $943 mn to Korean PEs

Hyosung Vina Chemicals’ facilities in Vietnam (Courtesy of Hyosung Chemical)

South Korea’s Hyosung Group is poised to sell a 100% stake in its specialty and industrial gas unit to a consortium led by IMM Private Equity Inc. and STIC Investments Inc. for 1.3 trillion won ($943.3 million) to improve the financial conditions of the conglomerate’s debt-ridden chemicals arm.

Hyosung Chemical Corp. said on Thursday that Swiss investment bank UBS and state-run Korea Development Bank (KDB), the lead managers of the sale, have named the domestic consortium as the preferred bidder.

IMM PE and STIC will each invest 650 billion won, according to banking industry sources. IMM will leverage its experience in the 100% acquisition of Korean industrial gas supplier AirFirst Co. in 2019, in which the Seoul-based PE holds a 70% stake after selling 30% to BlackRock in June 2023.

Hyosung Chemical’s specialty and industrial gas division produces 8,000 tons of nitrogen trifluoride (NF3), the world’s third-largest manufacturer following Korea’s SK Specialty Co. and China’s Peric Special Gases Co. NF3 is primarily used as a cleaning agent for semiconductor manufacturing equipment.  

The specialty gas division posted 20 billion won in operating profit and 168.4 billion won in revenue last year, down 62.1% and 15.3% on-year, respectively.

(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)

CHALLENGES IN VIETNAMESE OPERATIONS

Hyosung Chemical logged 336.7 billion won and 188.8 billion won in operating losses in 2022 and 2023, respectively. The chemicals maker’s total debt amounted to 3.2 trillion won with 3485.8% of the debt-to-equity ratio as of the end of March this year.

The company’s financial conditions have deteriorated as the operation of a Vietnam-based factory has been delayed.

Hyosung Chemical injected more than 1.5 trillion won to build a chemical plant which was constructed in 2021. But the company struggled with the Vietnamese business due to the factory’s equipment defects and several renovations. The plant was not fully operational until June last year, industry sources said.

Chinese chemicals makers aggressively expanded their market share with low-cost polypropylene (PP) and terephthalic acid (TPA), Hyosung Chemical’s core products, while the Korean company strived to operate the Vietnamese plant.

The company’s financial burden has worsened due to rise in the cost of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), a component of PP, since the Ukraine-Russia war.

It will focus on the normalization of its Vietnamese affiliate Hyosung Vina Chemicals Co. after improving its financial conditions.

In May, Hyosung Chemical and Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) signed a memorandum of understanding in May to jointly invest in the Vietnamese unit and use LPG from the oil giant of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to make chemicals.

By Jun-Ho Cha and Jong-Kwan Park

chacha@hankyung.com

Jihyun Kim edited this article.

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