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Copyright 2011, Forbseindia.com
How the Apollo, Cooper Deal Was Botchedby Ashish K Mishra | Jan
31, 2014
The $2.5 billion Apollo-Cooper marriage was called off before
they could say I do. Both parties are aggrieved, and everyone, it
seems, isto blame. Together, they would have become the 7th largest
tyre company in the world. But, as this reconstruction of events
indicates,they let the roadblocks puncture that ambition
Neeraj Kanwar was having a moment. On a holiday. In London. On
December 30, 2013.
The 40-year-old managing director of the $2.4 billion Apollo
Tyres, Indias largest tyre company, Kanwar had had a tumultuous
year.Travelling for over 130 days, he had been holed up mostly in
the US where Apollo Tyres was painstakingly trying to acquire
Cooper Tire& Co. It was a year when he had spent most of his
time explaining, negotiating and strategising escape routes out of
one crisis to another;when he was surrounded by people he didnt
quite trust, one of whom even took him to court and questioned his
integrity in business. Ina two-decade-long professional career, his
integrity was the one thing he took immense pride in. When alone,
it was also a year that oftenforced him to contemplate his next
move, in business, in the courts.
But back in the comfort of his London home, surrounded by his
two children and wife, during lunch, Kanwar was having a
momentofintrospection, reflection. The year was finally coming to
an end and he was glad. It was then that his mobile phone rang. The
call wasfrom a colleague in the US. Hi, Neeraj. Cooper has called
off the merger. Just announced, he was told.
Kanwar didnt react immediately. This was yet another surprise in
a year full of surprises. He got off the call quickly. Lunch had
not yetbeen served. He got up to find a quiet corner. And called
his dad.
Coming of ageThe Apollo-Cooper merger was announced on June 12,
2013. A day after the announcement, the price of the Apollo Tyres
stock, which istraded on the National Stock Exchange of India and
the Bombay Stock Exchange, dropped from the previous days close of
Rs 92 to Rs68.60 per share. A day later, it reached its 52-week low
on concerns that Apollo was taking on too much debt to pay
Coopernearly $2.5billion.
The Apollo management had expected this reaction. In fact, they
had anticipated that the stock would actually touch Rs 50.
That barrier was not breached but, still, Kanwar wanted to send
out a message that he knew what he was getting into.
On June 14, a Friday, Apollo called a press conference at the
Leela hotel in Chanakyapuri, New Delhi. Kanwar took centre stage,
makinga presentation, answering questions and always looking
confident. His father Onkar Kanwar, 71, made a few statements and
answeredsome questions but was happy to take the backseat. It was
clear that the deal had also signalled a transition at Apollo.
The Cooper deal was Neerajs coming of age moment. The senior
Kanwar said of his son, Watch out for him. He also has the fire in
thebelly like I had in my younger days.
Neeraj was convinced that the Apollo-Cooper merger would result
in the perfect global tyre company. From a geographical
perspective,Apollo was already big in India, Europe and Africa.
Cooper was established in North America and China. In terms of
products, Apollohad made inroads into getting contracts with car
companies like Volkswagen and General Motors. Cooper had
significant presence andexperience in the replacement tyre market.
Compared to their individual insignificant market position (Cooper
at No. 11 and Apollo atNo. 17), after the merger, the combined
entity would become the seventh largest tyre company in the
world.
It would be fair to say that the vision has been shaped by the
father. In the 1980s, Onkar Kanwar got the chance to study Cooper
Tire &Rubber Co, an American tyre major. Focussed on
replacement tyres, Cooper was a hugely profitable company. Kanwars
Apollo Tyreshad a technical collaboration with General Tire
International Co and on every visit to the US, the Indian
businessman would hear aboutCooper Tire. They were making a lot of
money. Coming back to India, I would tell my people to study this
company, Kanwar told
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reporters of the time when Apollo was still a fledgling company,
having just escaped closure in the previous decade.
Analysts and journalists, though, were not convinced. So Neeraj
tried to temper the mood, saying, Only $450 million of the total
$2.5billion debt for the deal would be serviced by its India
business. The remaining debt of $2.1 billion is a non-recourse
debt, taken on cashflows of Cooper and Vredestein [the European
subsidiary of Apollo Tyres]. It didnt matter. The Apollo share
price fell by another 5.6percent that day. The Kanwars, however,
were positive that the market would eventually realise the value in
the deal. Father and son hadalready booked tickets to the US to
close all the remaining formalities with Cooper. For them, it was a
done deal. They couldnt have beenmore wrong.
Sitting in a factory in Rongcheng, a city in the extreme north
east of China, a 51-year-old Chinese man had been keenly following
theevents which unfolded after the announcement by Apollo and
Cooper. And he was seething with anger.
Graphic: Sameer Pawar
Trouble in paradiseNeeraj flew into Beijing to meet Che Hongzhi
on May 15, four weeks before the formal announcement of the
merger.
Che, who is commonly referred to as Chairman Che, is the
chairman of the Chengshan Group in China, which employs about
7,000people in the city of Rongcheng. A former Communist Party
member to boot, it would be fair to say that Che is a highly
influentialperson. Cooper Tire has a joint venture with the
Chengshan Group called Cooper Chengshan Tire Co, in which Cooper is
the majorityshareholder with a stake of 65 percent. Signed in 2006,
this joint venture along with another facility (not part of this
JV) contributesabout 25 percent to Coopers global annual sales
turnover.
In the course of due diligence, Neeraj wanted to meet Che to
ensure both partners understood each other and, more importantly,
thatChe was comfortable about working together in the future.
Except that the meeting turned out to be a disaster.
Che didnt speak any English. Neeraj didnt speak Chinese. Both
had brought along translators. Since the meeting was set up by
Cooper,two senior officials from the company were in attendanceHal
Miller, president of international business, and Allen Tsaur,
vicepresident of Asia operations. Neeraj was accompanied by his
legal advisor, a representative from Sullivan & Cromwell.
Neeraj told Cheabout Apollo being in advanced talks to acquire
Cooper, about how both companies are a great fit and how the China
business is a criticalpart of the deal.
Che listened patiently but wasnt pleased. Ive been a good son
and the father is good. Now the father is divorcing me and the
stepfatheris coming in, he said. Neeraj was baffled. He continued
to outline the benefits of the merger but Che kept on repeating his
issue with thestepfather. Ches parting line: What was in this for
him? If the merger was to go through, he would like to be
compensated.
As revealing as this statement was, Neeraj tried not to make
much of it. Meanwhile, none of these questions came up for
discussion: WasChe comfortable with working with Apollo? If not,
could the issues be ironed out? If he wanted an exit, how much was
he expecting forhis share? If Che were to exit, could Apollo run
the subsidiary in China on its own?
Four weeks later, Neeraj went ahead and announced the merger
anyway.
It wasnt a wise thing to do. And little did Neeraj know that Che
had plans of his own. On June 15, three days after the
announcement,Che was in the US at the invitation of Cooper, with a
bid of his own to acquire the company. He bid $38 per share, $3
more than Apollo
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had. Cooper had its own reasons to believe that Ches financing
sources were not as committed as Apollos. Despite the higher bid,
itdecided to go ahead with Apollo. Che left the US feeling
insulted.
On June 18, a few days after Ches sudden stunt in the US, the
union at Cooper Chengshan Tire Company (CCT) sent an open letter to
allCooper employees criticising the merger. It said the acquisition
was too highly leveraged and questioned Coopers ability to meet
theneeds of its workers and customers. This was the beginning of
what would be a chain of events that would ultimately put the whole
dealin jeopardy. On June 21, the 5,000-odd workers at the plant
went on a strike. They got back to work a week later but
stoppedmanufacturing any Cooper-branded tyres. Both Cooper and
Apollo realised that the disruption in China needed immediate
attention.Since neither had seen this coming, it was now an open
question of who would bell the cat.
On July 1, Cooper and Apollos representatives met in the US to
discuss a possible China strategy. Apollo stated upfront that this
wasCoopers problem. Neeraj was not going to meet Che again. Cooper
must convince Che to agree to the merger. There could be no talk
ofcompensation. He must be talked into coming on board. Roy Armes,
the CEO of Cooper, along with his representatives, met Che in
Chinaon July 10. But the meeting was a non-starter. Che was
disappointed and frustrated when he learned that Armes had turned
up withnothing concrete to offer. Armes went back to the US empty
handed.
A day later, CCTs union sent a letter to Standard Chartered
Bank, one of the bankers for Apollo, asking that it reconsider its
decision tofinance the transaction because of significant
reputational risks to your bank amid such a complex situation! The
next day, the unionput out an advertisement in The Wall Street
Journal questioning who can guarantee the success of integration
between Chinese cultureand Indian culture? The same day, the CCT
union went on strike again. The plant was shut indefinitely. A few
weeks later, Coopersmanagers were barred from entering the plant.
They had no access to CCTs financial books or records.
The father had lost control over the son. And thats when the
blame game began.
The Spat Part IHowever nave this may seem, Apollo says that it
took Cooper at face value; that throughout diligence, Cooper
maintained that it hadexcellent relations with its partner in China
and there would be no problem. Roy Armes and his whole team told us
there will be noproblem. Even if the guy is a little upset, we will
manage it. We have a great relationship with him; weve worked
together for sevenyears, says Sunam Sarkar, chief financial officer
of Apollo Tyres.
Sarkar should know. Hes been part of the deal since day one. To
even conceive that the 65 percent shareholder of a company would
nothave access to his own plant and to his own financial records
was, honestly, completely beyond conception, he adds.
Cooper, on the other hand, alleges that Apollo knew that Che was
expecting to be compensated. That should have been included in
theoffer price made for Cooper. And it wasnt.
It gets worse. Even as all this was happening, Apollo had no
clue that Che was one of the bidders in the race to acquire Cooper
Tire.Subsequently, when Apollo did get to know (as late as October,
but more on that later), the company alleges that this was one of
the realreasons for Ches anger. Part of his anger was monetary and
part of it was his face because he was asked to bid and he bid
higher, butCooper didnt consider it, says Sarkar.
Cooper denies any of this happened. This meeting [on June 15
between the Cooper Chengshan Tire joint venture partner and
Cooperexecutives] did not take place. No bid was received from
Chengshan Group after the merger agreement was signed, the company
toldForbes India in an emailed statement.
But there is no debate on the fact that China was a critical
part of the deal. And now it was in a limbo.
Experts believe that Apollo has no reason to feel cheated. Brian
Quinn, a professor of law at Boston Law College, who has followed
thecase closely, says that under Federal law the directors of
Cooper have an obligation to listen and evaluate any proposal that
comes theirway till the time they extinguish the rights of
stockholders. In the US these situations happen all the time. That
might rub people thewrong way, but it is permitted under the law,
he told Forbes India.
To complicate matters further, time was of the essence. While
entering into the deal, Cooper and Apollo had set themselves a
deadline ofDecember 31 to close the transaction. Debt financing was
dependent on Cooper providing all the financial records by
mid-November,with certain SAS 100-reviewed (that is, audited)
records. With the China facility out of bounds, Cooper was worried.
A question beingasked around was, are things slowing down?
What is strange is that this transaction had a very short fuse.
Just six months, says Quinn. In normal domestic US transactions,
peoplegive themselves a year, even 18 months, for difficult deals.
In this case it looks like the partners felt that either there are
no issues or ifthere are, it doesnt matter. We will get it
done.
Through June, July and August, Cooper and Apollo continued to
talk to each other to try and solve the CCT issue. They couldnt.
Thatswhen another issue which had been simmering under the radar
flared up.
On August 1, United Steelworkers (USW), the union representing
employees at Coopers Findlay, Ohio, and Texarkana, Arkansas,
plants,filed grievances, alleging that Cooper had violated its
collective bargaining agreements by entering into the merger.
If the deal has to go through, Apollo must negotiate a new
contract with the union. They had sat through a few meetings with
Cooperand Apollo but nothing concrete had emerged. So they would go
to court.
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Forbes India reached out to David Jury of the United
Steelworkers Union to answer a set of questions. On a call, he
said, I am the legalrepresentative of USW with Cooper. Please dont
call me again. Trouble at homeCooper Tire and USW dont have a
history of getting along well. During the economic downturn of
2008, when fuel prices shot up andUS car sales came to a screeching
halt, Cooper found itself in the middle of a crisis. To tide over
the tough economic environment, itfaced a tough decision to shut
down one of its four plants in the country. Thats when 1,050
members of the USW union in Findlay, Ohio,agreed to give the
company $30 million in concessions, in the form of pay cuts for new
hires and reduced bonuses to keep the plantopen. Subsequently, when
the companys fortunes improved, in October 2011, USW appealed to
the management to increase wages.Cooper said that if the plant had
to remain cost competitive, that was not possible. The workers were
not happy. Starting late November2012, the Findlay plant remained
in lockout for three months.
In that context, USW first made its displeasure (about the
merger) known to Cooper executives in a meeting on July 8,
2013.
Cooper explained to them the merits of the merger and tried to
dissuade them from filing any grievance. On July 24, Sarkar along
withother Apollo representatives travelled to Nashville, Tennessee,
where the union has a regional head office, to meet with the USW.
Sarkarsays that it was a good meeting and he was surprised to see
that USW had done its homework. They spoke to our union leaders
here inKochi and they spoke to the works council in Europe to find
out more about Apollo, says Sarkar. They told us in as many words
that wehave done our diligence on Apollo and we are very
comfortable dealing with them. We are actually glad that a company
like you is takingover.
Nevertheless, the meeting didnt result in any settlement. Like
with Che in China, Apollo hadnt come to the table with a
compensationoffer in mind. Instead, the company wanted to
understand what it was getting into before committing to anything.
On August 1, USWfiled for grievances. Both Cooper and Apollo
opposed the grievances and decided that any further negotiation
between them and USWwould take place only after arbitration, which
they were sure of winning.
But five weeks later, on September 13, James Oldham, the
arbitrator, ruled in favour of USW. The ruling said that Apollo
must reachcollective bargaining agreements with 2,500 USW locals at
Coopers plants in Findlay, Ohio, and Texarkana, Arkansas, before it
canproceed with its acquisition of Cooper. The deal was on hold.
Cooper was anxious because time was running out. Apollo was
surprised.All bets were off.
The Spat Part IIAgain as part of due diligence, in early 2013, a
particular clause in the union legal agreement between Cooper and
USW suggested that itwas possible that post the merger
announcement, the union might raise a red flagthey could have a say
both in terms of fresh demandsand a change of control in
management. There was a possibility assigned to it. When we raised
it with the Cooper management, theysaid that in their view it didnt
apply at all and they were very confident that they would be able
to settle with USW, says Sarkar. If not,they were prepared to go
for arbitration, which they were completely confident of winning,
he adds, pointing out that no settlementvalue was factored in the
$35 per share offer Apollo made for Cooper.
Cooper claims that during the extensive diligence, the company
had informed Apollo of its historical, tumultuous relationship with
USWand its likely reaction to the merger. Both parties had jointly
agreed that first, it was unlikely that USW would go into
arbitration andsecond, if it did then they would contest it. Both
parties had agreed on the way forward. Relations between the two
deteriorated furtherpost arbitration.
The arbitrator ruled in favour of USW, and Onkar Kanwar, Neeraj
and Sarkar quickly packed their bags for the US. The news
reachedthem on a Saturday. On September 16, a Monday, both took a 2
am flight from New Delhi to New York. The next day they met
withCoopers executives to discuss the negotiation strategy. That
meeting didnt go particularly well. Cooper claims that the first
thing Apollowanted to discuss was not the negotiating strategy with
USW, but that the merger agreement would need to be re-negotiated
consideringthe incremental costs which had come upnamely Che and
USW. Apollo denies any such discussion took place at this
point.
On September 19, the sparring partners travelled to Nashville
again to negotiate withUSW. The union had ten demands, which
included coverage of two other plants (notunionised) and one-time
bonuses for all union members among several other conditions.By
Apollos estimate, the additional cost of meeting those demands was
about $130-140million. Before the negotiations began, Apollo claims
that Coopers estimate was just $10million.
At the meeting, there were about 30 people representing USW and
eight people fromApollo and Cooper. The union put forward their
demands. The Apollo-Cooper partywould then break out to consult
among themselves the implications of those demands.
The proceedings continued the whole of Thursday and spilled over
to Friday. By lateevening on Friday (September 20), Coopers
representatives started fretting. StanleyWeiner, partner at Jones
Day, an expert in labour matters, and Coopers counsel,
startedpushing Neeraj to agree to the unions demands, at any cost.
Their behaviour at thatmeeting was hugely dysfunctional because
their lawyer aggressively was trying to get us toagree to whatever
USW was asking for, says Sarkar.
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The company had scheduled a board meeting of its directors on
September 30 to approve themerger. They wanted Apollo to settle
with USW at any cost. Cooper felt that Apollo was notnegotiating in
good faith and was trying to delay closing the transaction.
Sarkar contends that Apollo was merely trying to find a way to
work together, especiallysince the amount$150 millionwas not small
change. It is a question of affordability,long-term business
sustainability, because whatever we agreed to would then go into
unioncontracts which forever would have an implication on the
company, he says. We hadntruled out anything. We recruited an
actuarial specialist to advise us. I think any prudentbusinessman
would have done the same. You cant commit to costs which you dont
fullyunderstand.
Negotiations between Apollo and USW continued the whole of the
next week. Apollo thoughtold Cooper to keep out of the discussions.
Their impatience wasnt helping. At the end ofthe day, the
arbitrator had given the responsibility to Apollo and USW to agree
on a wayforward, says Sarkar. Even though there was no resolution
on the USW front, on September30, the Cooper board cleared the
merger. On October 2, Apollo and Cooper executives metagain in New
York.
The meeting began with the latest update on the USW situation.
Roy Armes, the CEO ofCooper, wasnt happy that his executives werent
allowed to be a part of the negotiations.Neeraj said that if Apollo
had to settle with USW, it would cost the company an additional$150
million. That translates roughly into a $2.5-a-share downward
revision of the $35 pershare offer price (65 million Cooper shares
outstanding). We need to revise the price, saidNeeraj.
Armes was furious. I am being asked to pay for something which I
cant even negotiate Ican go back to my board for a buck but 2.5
bucks is a lot, Armes is believed to have said. Andlike many other
meetings between these two partners, this one too ended in
ambiguity.Armess parting line to Neeraj, according to Apollo
sources, was: You will see a lot of legalityflying around because
we have to protect our shareholder interest but I wouldnt worry
aboutthat.
Two days later, on October 4, Cooper sued Apollo in the Chancery
Court of Delaware. Thecharge: Apollo had buyers remorse. It had
breached the parties merger agreement by notusing reasonable best
efforts to close the transaction, but instead was trying to
re-negotiate
the deal price after labour unrest at various Cooper
manufacturing facilities increased the likely cost of acquisition
for Apollo. Cooperalso sought an immediate implementation of the
merger agreement, much before the closing date of December 31. The
legal suit was the final blow in this saga of distrust between the
two partners. Once the matter was in the hands of lawyers,
allcommunication between the two partners ceased.
Did Apollo see it coming? Sarkar says it was out of the blue.
Physically there was nothing more we could have done. Cooper didnt
havetheir financials in place and they knew that the banks needed
the financials to be able to go to market. But they wanted to force
thistransaction, he says. The trial lasted about a month. On
November 8, the Chancery Court of Delaware, Judge Sam Glasscock III
ruledthat Apollo had not breached the terms of its $2.5 billion
deal to buy Cooper Tire. The ruling also rejected Coopers buyers
remorseclaim and that Apollo was dragging its feet on closing the
deal.
Sarkar says Cooper completely misread Apollos intentions. It was
the difference between the American professional mentality and
theIndian promoter mentality. The American professional management
thought, oh, Apollos share price has crashed by 40 percent so
thesepeople will have a rethink on the deal, he says. Thats not the
case. Promoter management always looks at longer term
strategicbenefits. Unfortunately in our case, American professional
managements, who are so quarter-to-quarter focussed, saw it purely
as, oh,these guys must be having buyers remorse.
Cooper still believed it had a strong case, so it filed an
appeal to the Delaware Supreme Court. And strange as this may seem,
Apollo stillwanted Cooper.
The last rescue actRongcheng, located close to the Yellow Sea,
doesnt have an airport. The nearest is in a town called Weihai
which is about a 45-minutedrive away. The city is quite
enterprising, though, and among the industries there is a large
shipbuilding yard which is state-owned, anArcelor steel coil plant
and a few tyre companies.
On the night of November 11, three days after the court ruling,
Onkar Kanwar, Neeraj and Sarkar left on a Singapore Airlines flight
forBeijing. From Beijing they flew to Weihai. They got to Rongcheng
at 11 AM on September 13. They checked into a government hotel,
hadlunch and began waiting anxiously for a special guestChairman
Che. Che along with his translator, lawyer and two other
companyexecutives arrived at 2.30 pm. It was a fairly difficult
start to the meeting, say Apollo representatives present there.
You people have insulted me, he began.
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Senior Kanwar took charge. Legally, Apollo was not even allowed
to have any direct interface with you given the fact that Cooper is
yourshareholder. The transaction we are doing is only a change in
shareholding at the American level, he said. And everything else
belowthat remains exactly as it is. But if we have hurt you or
insulted you in any way, I apologise on behalf of Cooper, on behalf
of us.
By the end of the three-hour-long meeting, Che had mellowed
down. He claimed that hehad been taken for a ride by Cooper. A few
years back, he had sold his 15 percent stake inthe joint venture to
Cooper and all he got was $18 million. The other pinprick was
beingrejected despite a higher bid than Apollo. Their meeting ended
with Che inviting the Apolloteam to come and visit his tyre plant
the next day. On November 14, Apollo executives alongwith Che took
a long tour of the factory.
Their next meeting was with the mayor of Rongcheng. It was
followed by lunch and anothermeeting to discuss the way
forward.
Che laid out the options on the table. A 65:35 status quo joint
venture, where Apollo wouldown 65 percent was out of question.
Option 1: Going forward, he would like to have amajority stake in
the venture, from 35 to 70 percent. Option 2: Apollo should buy him
outand run the plant themselves. Apollo liked Option 2. But Sarkar
says that there was a hugedifference in valuation expectations. Our
range was $142 to $200 million. He started at$500 million. We asked
for a basis for that. But he said no, this is what my company
isworth, he says. After some deliberations, he came down to $450
million.
But that was it. Apollo left the negotiation table. It was not a
price the company was willingto pay. Finding a way doesnt mean
finding a way at any cost. It doesnt mean we will giveUSW $150
million. It doesnt mean we will give Chairman Che $400 million
bucks. It has tobe finding a sensible way forward, says Sarkar.
On December 16, the Delaware Supreme Court dismissed Coopers
appeal.
On December 18, Armes called Onkar Kanwar with a suggestion that
both partners hold aconference call to discuss a post December 31
scenario. Lets find another way to do this,he said. The group got
on to the call. A suggestion for extending the December 31
deadlinewas immediately rejected since the very nature of the
acquisition had changed. What theyagreed on is that a small team be
formed at the earliest to look at the contours of a newdeal. A
four-member team was decided on. From Apollo: Sunam Sarkar and
Gaurav Kumar,group head, corporate strategy and finance. From
Cooper: Brad Hughes, vice president andCFO, and Hal Miller,
president, the International Tire business.
This small group didnt have a single meeting post that call. The
holiday season was upon them. On December 30, 7 am, Ohio
time,Cooper announced that it had called off its merger with
Apollo.
A few minutes later, Neeraj Kanwar, in London, got the call. He
said he was surprised and disappointed by the news.
The moment for the deal had passed.
(Additional reporting by Prince Mathews Thomas)
This story has been constructed from court documents, Securities
and Exchange Commission filings by Cooper Tire, conversations
withApollo Tyre executives and independent experts. Despite
repeated attempts, Cooper refused to engage, saying they will not
have anyadditional comment at this time.
This article appeared in Forbes India Magazine of 07 February,
2014
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