Friday, October 12, 2012

Apollo Tyres eyeing Cooper Tire

The acquisition of the world’s 9th biggest tire maker by sales would give Apollo Tyres access to the US market for replacement tires for cars and light and medium trucks. Photo: Priyanka Parashar/Mint
The acquisition of the world’s 9th biggest tire maker by sales would give Apollo Tyres 
access to the US market for replacement tires for cars and light and medium trucks.
 Photo: Priyanka Parashar/Mint

Reuters  :Fri, Oct 12 2012. 08 32 AM IST


Apollo Tyres Ltd is in early talks to acquire a majority stake in US-based Cooper Tire and Rubber Co. in a deal valued at around $600 million, a source with direct knowledge of the situation told Reuters.
Shares of Cooper Tire jumped as much as 11% to $20.76, valuing the company at $1.3 billion. Apollo has a market value of about $840 million.
The acquisition of the world’s 9th biggest tire maker by sales would give Apollo Tyres access to the US market for replacement tires for cars and light and medium trucks.
Apollo Tyres has hired Standard Chartered and HSBC for a secondary share sale in the Indian market to raise up to $150 million, the source said.
It is also in talks with Standard Chartered for financing, this person said.
Apollo Tyres will use fresh borrowing and proceeds from the share sale, expected mid November, to finance the deal, the source added.
Apollo Tyres, which does not currently operate in the US, gets two-thirds of its revenue from India but its market in that country is softening along with the economy.
Truck tires account for about 60% of its sales in India and half of its global sales.
“Apollo Tyres has a target to become a global top-10 tire maker by 2016 and this deal...could comfortably get them there,” Morgan Stanley analysts led by Ravi Shanker wrote in a client note.
Tire makers are under pressure from rising rubber and oil costs and weakening demand. Cooper rival Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. said in July it expected raw material costs to rise about 7% in 2012.
Cooper Tire focuses on replacement tires, an area of the market that is expected to benefit from growing fleets of aging vehicles in the United States, S&P Capital IQ analyst Efraim Levy said.
Apollo Tyres reported revenue of Rs.12,150 crore in the year to 31 March.
On a buying spree
Apollo Tyres bought South Africa-based Dunlop Tyres International Ltd in 2006 and Dutch tire-maker Vredestein Tires in 2009.
“Apollo has some familiarity with Cooper—Dunlop SA has until recently been the sole distributor of Cooper Tires in South Africa,” the Morgan Stanley analysts said.
Cooper Tire had net sales of $3.93 billion in 2011. The company is scheduled to report third-quarter results on 2 November.
Cooper Tire declined to comment. “We have a strict policy of not commenting on rumors and speculation in the market,” company spokeswoman Anne Roman said.
A spokesman for Apollo Tyres also declined to comment.
Cooper Tire’s stock was up 6% at $19.74 on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday afternoon. Goodyear’s shares were up 2% at $12.56.
Apollo Tyres’ shares closed 2% higher on the National Stock Exchange. Reuters

Urban india’s ownership of credit cards increases as income rises


Ramesh Pathania/Mint
Ramesh Pathania/Mint

Mint :Indicus Analytics   :  Thu, Oct 11 2012. 06 25 PM IST

In the higher income categories of Rs.20 lakh and above, the average ownership is around 62%.

The Indian Financial Scape survey, conducted by Delhi-based economics research firm Indicus Analytics, tracks patterns of financial asset ownership of urban India. In its sixth issue, we look at credit card ownership. The data is split across income groups and regional variations. At least 35,000 households were surveyed across urban India over the period April-June 2012. At the end of nine weeks, the survey will reveal what drives financial asset ownership in urban India. Data on credit cards shows that as urban household income increases so does the ownership of credit cards. In the lowest income category of upto Rs.75,000, the average card holding is less than 1%. It rises to just under 5% in the next income bracket of income upto Rs.5 lakh. In the higher income categories ofRs.20 lakh and above, the average ownership is around 62%. If we look at zone wise card ownership, the western region is again ahead of its peers in credit card ownership as it has been with other financial products, with average ownership of almost 30% compared with just over 26% in the east, north and south.

Key takeaways:

1. The pan-India ownership of credit cards for urban households is at 27.65%.
2. In the lowest income group of belowRs.75,000, the average ownership is below 0.63%.