Isofoton challenges Hanwha's bid for the solar cell maker.
German solar companies are facing reduced government aid and
increasing competition from Chinese companies that has created a global
glut of panels. Q-Cells and German competitors Solon SE, Solar
Millennium AG and Solarhybrid AG are among a group of solar companies
that filed for protection from creditors in the past year.
BERLIN --
Hanwha Group's bid to buy the insolvent German manufacturer Q-Cells
SE drew a competing approach from a Spanish power-plant builder that
also wants to own what was once the biggest solar-cell maker.
Isofoton SA was approved to bid for Q-Cells after
Chief Executive Officer Angel Luis Serrano met with the German company’s
insolvency administrator Henning Schorisch today, according to an
e-mailed statement from Isofoton. Serrano will present the bid, to be
made with a U.S. investor it didn’t identify, to Q-Cells’ creditors at
an Aug. 29 meeting, it said.
Hanwha, South Korea’s 10th-largest industrial group,
yesterday signed a contract with Q-Cells to pay as much as 40 million
euros ($50 million) for the Thalheim-based company’s headquarters,
factories in Germany and Malaysia, as well as sales units in the U.S.,
Australia and Japan, Hanwha said in today in an e-mailed statement. The
deal is subject to approval from Q-Cells’ creditors at their meeting
this week, it said.
Interest has increased in Q-Cells months after its
filing for protection from creditors in April. The company’s market
value dropped to 35 million euros after its shares fell 98 percent in
the last three years.
“Isofoton is still confident that there’s a chance to
buy Q-Cells as the creditors haven’t yet agreed to the Hanwha bid,” Carl
Graf von Hohenthal, a spokesman for Isofoton working for Brunswick
Group GmbH in Berlin, said today in an interview.
Hanwha, whose purchase contract signed with Schorisch
yesterday will be reviewed by creditors, also plans to assume 850
million Malaysian ringgit in debt guaranteed by Q-Cells Malaysia, the
group said.
Optimism Over Creditors
“We are optimistic that Q-Cells’ creditors would
approve our offer in an Aug. 29 meeting,” Seoul-based spokesman of the
Korean group, Park Jang Woo, said by phone today. He ruled out that
Isofoton’s possible bid would affect its attempt to acquire Q-Cells.
“It’s almost impossible for them to hold talks with other bidders
without breaching the agreement signed yesterday.”
Buying Q-Cells would enable Hanwha to boost its
capacity to make solar cells and panels to rank the world’s
third-largest, it said. Hanwha aims to sign a final contract in early
October, the statement said.
Isofoton is especially interested in Q-Cells’ research
capabilities and its “European dimension,” von Hohenthal said. It would
cut a tenth of Q-Cells’ workforce and keep production and research
sites in Germany and Malaysia as the company seeks to boost its
production capacity to 1,500 megawatts in the coming two years, it said
in the statement.
Government Aid
Hanwha plans to hold on to about three quarters of the
workforce in Thalheim, Q-Cells said in a statement yesterday. Christoph
Moeller, a spokesman for Q-Cells’ insolvency administrator Schorisch,
declined to comment further on the planned sale.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/08/solar-power-companies-offer-competing-bids-for-solar-panel-manufacturer-q-cells
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