Takata shortlists Daicel,
KKR, Ningbo, others in rescue search: sources
Send a link to a friend
[August 26, 2016]
By Taro Fuse and Junko Fujita
TOKYO (Reuters) - Takata Corp has
shortlisted six or seven companies, including a competitor and
private-equity funds, as potential financial investors to bail out
the Japanese car-parts maker, people involved in the process said.
Japanese chemical maker Daicel Corp <4202.T>, China's Ningbo Joyson
Electronic Corp <600699.SS> - the parent of Michigan-based air-bag
maker Key Safety Systems - and global funds KKR & Co <KKR.N> and
Bain Capital LP are among the groups presenting detailed turnaround
plans to Takata, eight people familiar with the process, including
two directly involved, told Reuters.
The shortlisting is a sign of progress in protracted efforts to
restructure Takata, whose faulty air bags are linked to the deaths
of at least 14 people and have sparked the biggest auto recalls
ever. As many as 30 had showed initial interest as of June in
rescuing the company.
Takata needs a financial backer to help overhaul its business and
carry ballooning costs as its stock price has crumbled almost 90
percent since early 2014 and it faces potentially billions of
dollars of liabilities over the sometimes deadly defects in its
air-bag inflators.
Takata and its steering committee, advised by investment bank Lazard
Ltd, hope to narrow the list to about two final bidders by
mid-September and choose a financial "sponsor" in October after
consulting with Takata's car maker customers, several sources said.
Representatives of Takata's steering committee, Daicel, KKR and Bain
Capital declined to comment on the search for a rescuer. Ningbo
Joyson has had no direct contact with Takata, but there may be
information exchanges going on through an intermediary, said
spokesman Chen Yang.
It was not clear who the other potential bidders are, or what
precise plans any of the suitors have for Takata's operations or
assets.
The sources declined to be named because the process is private.
Takata has not faced a reckoning as its air-bag liabilities remain
unresolved. And many Japanese car makers depend on the supplier, one
of the three dominant global makers of safety air bags, to keep
supplying the recalls and provide competition.
"Keeping Takata alive is important for automakers to maintain their
bargaining power," said SBI Securities auto analyst Koji Endo,
adding that some investors might find its non-inflator businesses
attractive, given its depressed share price.
UNREALISTIC DEADLINE?
Recalls of Takata air bags began in 2008, when inflators in the bags
began exploding with excessive force, spewing sometimes lethal
shrapnel into passenger compartments.
[to top of second column] |
A recalled Takata airbag inflator is shown after it was removed at
the AutoNation Honda dealership service department in Miami,
Florida, United States on June 25, 2015. REUTERS/Joe Skipper/File
Photo
More than 100 million vehicles worldwide have been slated for recall to replace
Takata inflators, which in addition to the deaths, are linked to more than 150
injuries - mostly in the United States and involving Honda Motor Co vehicles.
Car makers have borne most of the recall costs so far, but if Takata were found
to be solely responsible for the fault, it could face a bill of more than $10
billion, based on a rough calculation that each replacement kit costs around
$100. It also faces U.S. lawsuits.
The October deadline for finding a backer was unrealistic due to uncertainties
over its growing liabilities given expanding recalls and lawsuits, some of the
sources said.
A big challenge in the Takata rescue will be reaching consensus among the
supplier's more than 10 automaker customers over a restructuring plan, as they
are likely to have different ideas of how important it is to keep Takata afloat,
said SBI analyst Endo.
Some potential sponsors want Takata's automaker customers to forgive a hefty
portion of the recall costs or take a stake in the company, several sources
said.
And some would-be investors want to put Takata through bankruptcy to wipe out
some of its liabilities, they said. Takata's banks, too, may face pressure to
forgive debts, one source said.
(Reporting by Taro Fuse and Junko Fujita; Additional reporting by Emi Emoto,
Naomi Tajitsu and Maki Shiraki in Tokyo and Jake Spring in Beijing; Editing by
William Mallard and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|