Lafarge Africa is consolidating its businesses on the continent to simplify its ownership structure and operations, its head of strategy told Reuters on Monday.
Wole Adeleke said the decision was made three years ago after Lafarge combined its Nigerian business with its South African operations and listed the combined entity, which it renamed Lafarge Africa, on the Lagos stock exchange.
Now it’s seeking approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission to merge the operations of two other wholly-owned units, in a move engineered to consolidate management of the companies with no operational savings, Adeleke said.
In a notice to the stock exchange, Lafarge Africa said its board has asked the company to “undertake a business combination with United Cement Company of Nigeria Limited (Unicem) and Atlas Cement Company Limited (Atlas).”
“We needed to simply the ownership structure of Unicem. Because Unicem has some significant tax attributes it was decided that Unicem should be merged into Lafarge Africa,” he told Reuters by phone.
Unicem is the third largest cement plant in Nigeria.
Lafarge has been consolidating its businesses in Africa to cut costs and accelerate growth, particularly with arch-rival Dangote Cement, owned by Africa’s richest man Aliko Dangote, expanding aggressively on the continent.
Last month Holcim Nigeria, now part of Lafarge Africa, said it will pass a resolution in August to dissolve the company after its Swiss-based parent firm merged with French rival Lafarge in 2015.
It also delisted Lagos-listed Ashaka Cement after a buyout of minorities that breached stock exchange’s free float requirement, Adeleke said.
The Nigerian-based business of Franco-Swiss cement group, LafargeHolcim, expects to generate cost saving synergies of 9 billion naira by 2018 in Nigeria, it has said, following the global merger two years ago.
Shares in Lafarge Africa gained 1.69% on Monday, adding to a 44% rise so far this year, valuing the cement firm at 329.2 billion naira ($902.3 million).
LafargeHolcim Chairman Beat Hess has said the company was still adjusting its structures in big markets where both Lafarge and Holcim were present following the merger.
Lafarge Africa is raising 140 billion naira in fresh equity and plans to convert some loans into shares as part of a planned rights issue after it reported losses last year.
LafargeHolcim has said it will take part in a capital increase of the Nigerian unit to avoid diluting it’s nearly 71.4% stake, in a move which would also help simplify the ownership structure in Nigeria.