Home Industry Energy Saudi Petrochemical Plants Sahara, Sipchem Mull Merger A feasibility study will be carried out by the two companies over the next five months. by Reuters June 5, 2013 Saudi Arabia’s Sahara Petrochemical and Saudi International Petrochemical Co (Sipchem) said on Tuesday they had begun initial talks on a potential merger. The Zamil Holding Company Group, one of the Kingdom’s most prominent family businesses, is a major shareholder in both companies. A feasibility study will be carried out by the two companies over the next five months, with the plan then put to shareholders and the regulator for approval, separate statements from both companies to the Saudi stock exchange said. No value for the potential merger was given. Zamil, which has interests in petrochemicals, steel, housing, construction and other industrial sectors, owns 7.9 per cent of Sahara and 9.6 per cent of Sipchem. The government pension fund also has holdings of more than five per cent in both companies. Sipchem announced a fall in first-quarter net profit by nearly 60 per cent year-on-year to SAR64.5 million ($17.2 million) in April, which it attributed to planned plant shut-downs for maintenance. Sahara’s net income in the same period tripled to SAR142 million. Sipchem makes methanol, butanediol, tetrahydrofuran, acetic acid, acetic anhydride, vinyl acetate monomer, as well as carbon monoxide, its website says. Sahara makes propylene, polypropylene, ethylene and polyethylene. 0 Comments