Researcher at SK Specialty’s laboratory (File photo, courtesy of SK)
SK Group, the second-largest conglomerate in South Korea, is considering selling global leading specialty gas producer SK Specialty Co. for around 4 trillion won ($3 billion) to accelerate the group’s restructuring for effective management and financial health improvement.
The group’s holding firm SK Inc., which owns a 100% stake in the gas unit, is in talks with major buyout firms such as MBK Partners and Hahn & Co. for the sale of SK Specialty, investment banking industry sources said on Monday.
The sale is expected to reach around 3.6 trillion won, or 15 times the gas manufacturer’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) last year. The deal value may exceed 4.5 trillion won given that the company is among the global top specialty gas makers, sources added.
The holding firm may sell a part of the gas unit and manage it jointly with a new shareholder, instead of divesting of a full stake in the subsidiary, according to sources.
SK Group has been in talks with potential bidders to understand the market sentiment and is yet to confirm whether to pursue the sale, an official of the group said.
SK’s headquarters in Seoul (Courtesy of Yonhap)
TOP PLAYER IN SPECIALTY GASES
Formerly SK Materials, SK Specialty manufactures gases used in the production of semiconductors, display and solar cells for global companies including SK Hynix Inc., Samsung Electronics Co. and LG Display Co.
The company is the world’s largest maker of nitrogen trifluoride (NF3), a gas used as a cleaning agent in semiconductors, with a 40% global market share.
SK Specialty is also the global top maker of tungsten hexafluoride (WF6), primarily used in the manufacturing of integrated circuits, with a 2,000 tons annual production capacity.
The company is the world’s second-largest manufacturer of monosilane (SiH4), used for the production of silicon-based anodes for electric vehicle batteries.
The firm is seeing growing demand for its specialty gases as chipmakers increase production of 300 millimeter (mm) wafers, which require around 2.3 times as much as gases for 200 mm wafers. Demand for gases used in battery anode production is also on the rise.
Compared with industrial gases, specialty gas manufacturing has higher entry barriers with licensing of production and sales under the country’s High-pressure Gas Safety Control Act.
SK Group Chair Chey Tae-won speaks at the group seminar in December 2023 (Courtesy of SK)
RESTRUCTURING EFFORTS
Holding firm SK’s net debt exceeded 10 trillion won as of the end of June due to massive mergers and acquisitions over the past years. The company aims to speed up the improvement of its financial conditions by divesting SK Specialty.
SK Group has sought drastic restructuring since Chairman Chey Tae-won said that a company may face “sudden death” if it fails in quick adaptation to disruptions during the conglomerate’s annual seminar last October. In the year-end reshuffle last December, the group streamlined the senior executive line for more efficient management.
As part of restructuring, SK Networks Co. sold its car rental unit SK Rent-a-Car Co. to Asian buyout firm Affinity Equity Partners for 800 billion won in April.
In February, resources developer SK Earthon Co. signed to sell its entire 20% stake in Peru LNG Co. to US liquefied natural gas (LNG) company MidOcean Energy LLC for $256.5 million. The deal was finalized in April.
Investment management firm SK Square sold its entire 2.2% stake in Korean gaming behemoth Krafton Inc. for 272.5 billion won through a block trade in April.
SK Group plans more deals, including merger of the country’s top energy firm SK Innovation Co. with LNG arm SK E&S Co.
The group is also set to merge construction and waste management affiliate SK Ecoplant Co. with industrial gas unit SK Materials Airplus Inc. and consumer memory and storage maker Essencore Ltd.
By Ji-Eun Ha and Jun-Ho Cha
hazzys@hankyung.com
Jihyun Kim edited this article.