Government clears merger of SinoChem and ChemChina

Chinese regulators have approved the long-anticipated merger of two of the country’s major state-run

chemical groups, Sinochem and ChemChina. Together the refining and chemicals giant will have revenues of

over $150 billion (£109 billion), and its leaders anticipate cutting costs to become more competitive. However,

analysts don’t expect to see any big changes just yet.

An image showing the Sinochem logo

Source: © Reuters/Alamy Stock Photo

ChemChina will rely on ‘cash rich’ SinoChem to help overcome its debt from recent expansion overseas

ChemChina certainly needs Sinochem. It is heavily in debt, having paid $43 billion for Swiss agrochemicals

business Syngenta in 2017. There are already ties between the two companies: last year, Sinochem merged

its agricultural operations with Syngenta and Israel-based Adama (which ChemChina had bought in 2011).

Reuters reported that ChemChina had to seek up to $10 billion state support to fund the reorganisation. When

the new company, Syngenta Group, reported its annual results at the end of March, it confirmed plans to float

on public stock exchanges in mid-2022.

‘They would like to list in order to raise money. Although they are state-owned, it doesn’t mean that the

Chinese government will just keep printing money and cover them forever. They have to find avenues to make

money,’ says Salmon Lee, head of polyesters at research group Wood Mackenzie.

While Sinochem by contrast is ‘cash rich’ and has trading strengths it ‘has seen its glory days’ – its

performance peaked more than ten years ago, Lee adds. The background and contrasting growth pathways of

the two companies suggest it wont be ‘happily ever after from now on’.

In a statement, Sinochem said the new holding company aimed to become an ‘innovation-driven leader’ in the

sectors in which it operates. Indeed, the combined group is charged with upgrading China’s chemical industry

domestically, says Laura Zhai, senior director for Asia-Pacific corporates at Fitch Ratings.

‘There is a significant amount of synergy to be realised including R&D, distribution and production of their

overlapping business segments such as agrochemical, new materials and oil and gas,’ she adds. Syngenta,

for example, has little exposure in China, which could be immediately enhanced through the combined entity’s

strong distribution channels.

Lei Sun, a Wood Mackenzie consultant based in Beijing, points out that Sinochem has a lot of resources

compared to its new partner, especially in the refining sector. Crucially it also has ’a product export quota, so it

can sell refined products overseas’. Together, the companies will be producing around 37 million tonnes of oil

a year. Sun also expects ChemChina to be able to take advantage of Sinochem’s mature distribution and

logistics system. Combined, they’ll have around 1200 fuel stations across the country, which ‘would solve part

of the sales problems that that ChemChina is facing now’.

Last year, the US Department of Defence added both Sinochem and ChemChina to a list of entities it regards

as ‘Communist Chinese Military Companies’. The broad-ranging power makes the companies off-limits to US

investors and sets the scene for punitive sanctions, although these haven’t materialised under the new US

administration.

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