Korea's $5.3b JB Asset Management backs Newlake's Arrium bid
South Korea's JB Asset Management is part of the Newlake Alliance private equity bid for the Arrium assets.
South Korean heavyweight JB Asset Management has emerged as a key player alongside private equity firm Newlake Alliance in one of the two bids for the Arrium Australia assets which include the Whyalla steelworks.
BAM is a powerful partner for Newlake. The alternative asset manager is fully owned by Korean giant JB Financial Group, and has some $US4 billion ($5.3 billion) of assets under management.
Street Talk can reveal the Korean consortium is also proposing a 200 megawatt gas-fired power plant be built as part of the proposal which would not only power the steelworks in northern South Australia but also feed extra electricity back into the state's troublesome electricity grid.
The Newlake and JB Asset Management consortium has investment bank Deutsche Bank, law firm Norton Rose and number-cruncher Deloitte in its corner advising South Korean steelmaker Posco, with the consortium intending to use Posco's Finex steelmaking technology for the first time outside of Korea.
Lender sources noted the Korean group's Finex technology is commercially proven, with an initial demonstration plant commissioned in 2003, a second plant in 2007 and a third in 2013.
The investment and total capital spend on the steelworks, if the consortium is successful, is expected to nudge $1 billion.
Importantly, it is understood a binding agreement has been signed by the Newlake and JBAM consortium for the licensing of Posco's Finex technology.
The entity is proposing a longer ownership stint than the usual five to seven years that private equity holds onto assets, with a decade-long turnaround thought to be part of the plan.
One of the by-products of the Finex process is a large amount of gas, which helps reduce costs of the whole operation by keeping costs of the 200 mega watt-gas fired power plant low in a gas-constrained market.
That technology - which sources told this column is more environmentally friendly and cheaper to produce than the existing offering - and its investment in Whyalla is a key part of its pitch as the Korean consortium faces off against a rival offer from British bidders Liberty House and its closely-related SIMEC shipping, energy and commodities firm. [The British duo is owned by the Gupta family.].
It is understood the two bidders have turned their attention to Canberra after lobbing their binding offers at the end of May. Each bid is said to rely on a material amount of government support to help keep the steelworks operating.
It could take weeks for a final decision to come, sources said, with federal and South Australian governments heavily involved in the negotiations.
Receiver KordaMentha is overseeing the process on behalf of Arrium's lenders, while Morgan Stanley is running the auction. Arrium went into receivership more than 12-months ago with total debts of $2.8 billion.
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