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The Korea Herald
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THE INVESTOR
April 20, 2024

Market Now

Bumpy road lies ahead of top bidder to take over SsangYong Motor

  • PUBLISHED :October 25, 2021 - 09:18
  • UPDATED :October 25, 2021 - 09:18
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Sports utility vehicle All-New Rexton's special brand “Master” (SsangYong Motor)

A shareholder group led by South Korean electric bus manufacturer Edison Motors has unveiled the capital procurement plan for its proposed acquisition of India-based Mahindra & Mahindra’s embattled South Korean arm SsangYong Motor.

But the plan was later countered by state-run lender and one of the major creditors of the ailing sports utility vehicle maker, Korea Development Bank, signaling a rocky road ahead of the top bidder. 

On Oct. 22, KDB said it is “inappropriate” for the Edison-led investor consortium to openly call on KDB to provide asset-backed financing of SsangYong Motor, given that negotiations between concerned parties have yet to begin.

KDB also refuted the investor group’s argument that it had requested the state-run lender extend the loan by as much as 800 billion won ($680 million) during a press conference earlier Oct. 22. Such a request for financing had not been submitted either from the bankruptcy court in charge of the sales process or from SsangYong Motor, it added.

“(KDB’s) adequate level of validation and review of Edison Motors’ financing scheme and its future business plan must be preceded by KDB’s financing decision, considering we are spending taxpayer money,” KDB said in a statement.

This came soon after Edison Motors founder and Chief Executive Officer Kang Young-kwon expressed confidence in a plan to earmark up to 1.6 trillion won as part of a bid to acquire a controlling stake in SsangYong Motor, repay its debt and convert it into an electric vehicle manufacturer.

The consortium comprises Edison Motors, panel and semiconductor equipment maker Semisysco and homegrown financial investors Keystone Private Equity and Korea Corporate Governance Improvement.

The consortium aims to funnel up to 310 billion won to acquire SsangYong Motor’s stake to allow the carmaker to end its court-led rehabilitation, and inject an additional 500 billion won of capital to increase its control over the carmaker and implement its post-acquisition rehabilitation.

Plus, the consortium seeks up to 800 billion won in asset-backed financing from financial institutions, Kang said. KDB is the top candidate for the financing plan, according to Kang, who added “there is no reason for the KDB to reject” the plan to use assets -- including SsangYong Motor’s production line in Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi Province, appraised at 900 billion won -- as collateral.

Otherwise, its asset-backed financing may come from other lenders in Korea, as well as entities in Japan, Singapore and the United States, albeit at a higher debt financing cost, Kang said.

Kang estimated SsangYong Motor’s debt to amount to around 800 billion won, including authority bonds.

The Edison-led investor group is the only remaining bidder to acquire SsangYong Motor’s stake and debt, as the Seoul Bankruptcy Court ruled out a previous contender led by electric vehicle firm Electrical Life Business and Technology on Oct. 21, citing its failure to demonstrate the ability to come up with the acquisition costs.

SsangYong and deal manager Ernst & Young Hanyoung will embark on a process to approve the Edison-led consortium as the preferred bidder later this month.

This is the latest development in Korea’s court-led rehabilitation of SsangYong Motor that began in April, after a proposed buyer group led by US auto retailer HAAH Automotive failed to submit a letter of intent to acquire SsangYong Motor by the deadline in March.

SsangYong Motor has been recording losses since 2017, while its Indian parent Mahindra & Mahindra expressed its intent for an exit from the carmaker and reduced its capital in 2020. Mahindra & Mahindra has controlled SsangYong Motor since 2011, ending the company’s two years of court-led restructuring at the time.

If the deal proceeds as planned, SsangYong Motor, Korea’s longest-running automaker, will come under the umbrella of Korean entities for the first time in nearly two decades.

Edison Motors recorded revenue of 89.7 billion won with an operating profit of 2.7 billion won in 2020.

By Son Ji-hyoung (consnow@heraldcorp.com)

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