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Peugeot Nigeria: Rebirth and Revival thanks to Africa’s richest man?

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Aliko Dangote

January 26th saw the closing of bids for AMCON’s controlling shares of Peugeot Automobile of Nigeria Ltd.

AMCON’s acquisition of PAN’s controlling shares in October 2012 is set to end as Nigeria’s so called “bad bank” opens its shares of PAN up to bidders. Africa’s wealthiest man, Aliko Dangote, is ready to step up to the challenge.

January 2016 saw AMCON (the Asset Management Company of Nigeria), Nigeria’s so called “bad bank”, look to sell its stake in PAN (Peugeot Automobile of Nigeria Ltd.), and they began to invite bids from investors. AMCON currently owns a 79.3% controlling interest in PAN.

PAN was founded in 1972 as a joint venture between the French automaker and the Nigerian government, with the goal being to manufacture and market vehicles under the brand name of Peugeot.

Peugeot NigeriaDuring the 1980s PAN was profitable and produced upwards of 90,000 cars yearly. However, due to the influx of cheap, second-hand vehicles that began to come in to the country from Asia, the company began losing profits. This led to the sale of the controlling stake in the company, by the Nigerian government, to investors in 2006.

Unfortunately, the new investors did not fare well and managed to accumulate bad debt during their leadership, leading to AMCON’s acquisition of the majority share in the company in October 2012.

“Following the accumulation of huge non-performing loans (NPL) indebtedness to banks, in October 2012, the AMCON acquired the debts of the company and converted a portion to equity to help restructure the firm,” Peugeot had said.

Aliko Dangote and his associates take center stage

Enter Aliko Dangote, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Dangote group. A man that also carries the distinction of being Africa’s richest man, as ranked by Forbes in 2015, with an estimated wealth of $17.3 billion.

Dangote is already active in the cement, oil, food, sugar and farming industries, and now has his sights set on the automotive industry. Aliko Dangote has teamed up with the Nigerian States of Kaduna, and Kebbi, as well as the development lender Bank of Industry (BOI) to bid for the shares now up for sale by AMCON.

Governor Nasir El-Rufai told a conference, “We have submitted bids for the carmaker… with Aliko Dangote on board together with BOI, Kebbi and Kaduna State, we are confident our bid will sail through.”

Bidding for the stake controlled by AMCON closed on January 26th, and Governor El-Rufai did not provide any further details.

On its website PAN stated that its assembly plant, which is located in Kaduna state, has Peugeot Citroen PEUP.PA as its technical partner, and it has the capacity to assemble 240 cars in a day.

Made in Nigeria

Meanwhile, the Nigerian government has been keen on promoting a “Made in Nigeria” industrial policy and ordered local car distributors to make plans for new assembly plants back in 2014. They threatened to begin imposing prohibitive import duties.

Jean-Christophe Quemard, who is the executive vice president for Peugeot in Africa and the Middle-East, met with President Muhammadu Buhari in November to discuss reviving local production.

Other automakers such as Germany’s Volkswagen, Renault-Nissan, and South Korea’s Kia motors have also announced plans to begin assembling their vehicles in Nigeria, which is currently Africa’s biggest economy.

Not to be outdone, the Ford Motor Company of the United States will set up an assembly plant in Nigeria in November. With a 5,000 vehicle annual capacity, the plan is to produce up to 10 vehicles each day for the local market and eventually move into export into West African countries.

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Nigeria’s “bad bank” AMCON seeks bids for stake in Peugeot plant

Comments (0) Africa, Business, Latest Updates from Reuters

LAGOS (Reuters) – Nigeria’s state-backed AMCON “bad bank” said on Tuesday it plans to sell its majority stake in Peugeot Automobile Nigeria (PAN) Limited, a local joint venture with the major French automaker, and is seeking bids from investors.

Peugeot Citroen is the technical partner to the Nigerian assembly plant, which has capacity to assemble 240 cars a day, PAN said on its website.

In a statement, the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) said it owned 79.3 percent of PAN Nigeria Limited, having acquired the stake four years ago after purchasing the company’s debt and taking some as equity.

PAN Nigeria Limited was set up in 1972 as a joint venture between the Nigerian government and France’s Peugeot, with an annual production of 90,000 cars by the 1980s.

But operations nosedived and the company accumulated bad loans shortly after the government sold its stake via a privatisation to local core investors in 2006.

AMCON said PAN Nigeria had assets totalling 24.96 billion naira ($125.43 million) as of December 2014 and equity of 11.98 billion naira, and was seeking investors with experience in automobile manufacturing to buy the stake on offer.

Bids will close on Jan. 26 at 1600 GMT, it said.

President Muhammadu Buhari is keen to promote a “Made in Nigeria” industrial policy. In November, he met Peugeot’s executive vice president for Africa and the Middle-East, Jean-Christophe Quemard, to discuss the revival of local production.

The government under a National Automotive Industry Development Plan has ordered local car distributors to come up with plans for new assembly plants, along with threats of imposing prohibitive import duties.

U.S. carmaker Ford Motor Co’s partnership with a local car dealer has built its first model in Nigeria at a new assembly plant in November and said it will produce an initial 10 vehicles a day for the domestic market.

The auto market in Africa’s biggest economy has huge potential but only a small number of new vehicles are sold annually because the sector is dominated by imported used vehicles, and the absence of an industrial policy that would encourage suppliers to set up in Nigeria has stunted growth.

AMCON was set up to absorb bad loans from banks after a $4 billion bailout in 2009 rescued nine lenders from collapse. AMCON then bought bad loans at a discount in exchange for government-backed bonds and has since been selling off collaterals against those loans to pay bondholders.

 

(Reporting by Oludare Mayowa; Writing by Chijioke Ohuocha; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

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