Saint-Gobain / Sika : The case for a Pac-Man style offensive

It is clear that Sika is a better firm than Saint-Gobain (SGO). The invisible hand has been saying so ever since SGO tried in December 2014 to garner control of Sika by purchasing the voting rights held by the controlling Burkard family. The now three-year old legal standoff has had no impact on Sika’s operations and has made clear that Sika does not need SGO. This is a strong test of competence. Our opinion is that Sika’s management could do an even better job by taking over SGO and paring the fat. We believe that Sika can offer a 20%+ premium on a SGO share price below €45, namely an offer priced of €55. A 50% debt financed transaction would not put Sika’s balance sheet at risk. We conclude in the following review that a Sika bid on SGO would thus warrant a 20% uplift on SGO, while the upside potential on Sika’s target price could be a remarkable 85% (i.e. a CHF13,500). You can request full report by clicking here Executive Summary :
    I. The operating rationale
    II. The management rationale
    - Lean management almost non-existent at Saint-Gobain
    - Capital allocation skills almost non-existent at Saint-Gobain
    - Concluding remarks
    III. The ideal route to execute a Sika led merger
    IV. The financial rationale
    - Cost cutting
    - Synergies
    V. Two conservative scenarios:
    - Mediocre case scenario
    - Central scenario
    - Concluding remarks
    VI. Due diligence items
    - Asbestos in France
    - On pension provisions
    VII. The difficulties ahead of a reverse takeover
    - Burkard family
    - Saint-Gobain's employees
    - The French government
    - The regulators
    VIII. Summary of reverse takeover (central scenario)
  You can request full report by clicking here  
Subscribe to our blog


Let’s talk
Interested in our research and want to learn more?
AlphaValue is of the opinion that FY 2025 will end up being painful.
Alphavalue Morning Market Tip
A bet on long-cycle Norwegian oil and gas production.
The reality of more competition has finally sunk in.