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The chemicals industry suffered during the financial crisis, as some of the sectors it caters to, such as automobiles, saw their sales collapse. But with the recovery gaining steam, especially in emerging markets like China, chemicals are back in demand. Solvay said it plans to expand in emerging markets, where the two firms already generate about 40 percent of their combined sales. The Belgian company has been sitting on a mountain of cash since it sold its pharmaceuticals business to U.S.-based Abbott Laboratories for euro5.2 billion in 2009, so it had been expected to make a bid for another company sooner or later, said Jan Hein de Vroe, an analyst at ING. Many analysts had thought the company would expand into a business with less overlap with its own activities, such as food ingredients, de Vroe said. Solvay said it expects to save about euro250 million a year in costs within three years thanks to the takeover.
[Associated
Press;
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