Buyout Groups Bid for GEA Heat Exchangers Unit

April 4, 2014

Two buyout groups have made final offers for the heat exchangers division of German industrial machinery and process engineering group GEA , one of which could be picked for exclusive talks within days, three people familiar with the matter said.

EQT, which is working with industrial services group Bilfinger, and private equity investor Triton handed in bids valuing the unit at about 1.2-1.3 billion euros ($1.65-$1.8 billion) by a Friday deadline, the people said.

"However, the headline price does not give you the complete picture because almost a third of the unit's roughly 1.5 billion euros in sales is project-business, which comes with guarantees," one of the people said.

Some of the risk from these guarantees may wind up staying with the seller, potentially inflating the sales price, he added.

GEA, EQT, Bilfinger and Triton all declined to comment.

The heat exchangers division, GEA's second-largest business by revenue but last year defined as non-core, makes equipment for a wide range of applications from air conditioning to cooling towers.

In the consortium comprising Bilfinger and EQT, the industrial services group is interested in acquiring the cooling towers activities, while the buyout group would take the rest.

Triton acquired the heat exchanger business of Alstom earlier this week. But sources familiar with the transaction said the GEA and Alstom units are so different that few benefits would be gained by merging them.

($1 = 0.7263 euros)

(Reporting by Arno Schuetze; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

Logistics News

Kruger Named President of Austal USA

Kruger Named President of Austal USA

Tanker Enroute from Russia to India hit by Missile off of Yemen - Report

Tanker Enroute from Russia to India hit by Missile off of Yemen - Report

'24 Olympic Flame to Ride 3-Masted "Belem" to French port of Marseille

'24 Olympic Flame to Ride 3-Masted "Belem" to French port of Marseille

Situational Awareness System Battles Cognitive Fatigue in Watchkeepers

Situational Awareness System Battles Cognitive Fatigue in Watchkeepers

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News