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Maersk Reveals Details of Historic Split Into Oil, Transport

Maersk Reveals Details of Historic Split Into Oil, Transport

(Bloomberg) -- A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S will split into separate transport and energy businesses as Denmark’s biggest company moves ahead with an historic shake-up of the conglomerate.

Maersk, owner of the world’s biggest shipping firm, will become a transport and logistics company, the Copenhagen-based group said on Thursday. Oil and oil related businesses, “either individually or in combination,” will be separated from the group, it said.

Maersk Reveals Details of Historic Split Into Oil, Transport

Michael Pram Rasmussen, center, and Soren Skou on Sept. 22.

Photographer: Carsten Snejbjerg/Bloomberg

Goldman Sachs characterized the move as a “clear opportunity to unlock value,” in a note to clients. “Refocusing capital and management attention on transport, where we believe Maersk has clear competitive advantages, should lead to higher growth and return on capital in the medium term.” Exiting oil could also “unlock significant” sum-of-the-parts value, Goldman said.

“We continue to see Maersk’s valuation as attractive, failing to reflect either ongoing shipping market repair or the increasingly evident scope for unlocking SOTP value,” Goldman said.

Soren Skou, the group’s chief executive officer since July 1, said the container line business will now focus more on acquisitions and rely less on ordering new ships to achieve growth. “There are already enough ships in the world,” he said at a press conference after the announcement. The company has also indicated it’s getting more client requests since the recent collapse of Hanjin Shipping Co.

The shares rose as much as 4.2 percent and traded 1 percent higher at 10,000 kroner as of 12:04 p.m. in Copenhagen, bringing this year’s gains to 11 percent. Maersk also said its chief financial officer, Trond Westlie, will be replaced by Jakob Stausholm, who’s currently in charge of strategy at Maersk Line. The switch was part of a broader management reshuffle.

Maersk Reveals Details of Historic Split Into Oil, Transport

Fearnley Securities recommends buying the shares, which it predicts will reach 11,500 kroner a piece, in part based on an assumption that the new structure will generate about $600 million in cost synergies over the next three years. Skou said the company estimates that the transport business will achieve synergies that will add 2 percentage points in return on invested capital, equivalent to $600 million a year.

Chairman Michael Pram Rasmussen first revealed Maersk was assessing the merits of splitting up the group on June 23, the same day he dismissed Nils Smedegaard Andersen as CEO. The prospect of a structural reorganization sent the shares up as much as 12 percent on the day, as most investors expect the company to be worth more once its different parts are freed from the conglomerate structure.

Maersk’s board expects the oil and oil related businesses “will require different solutions for future development including separation of entities individually or in combination from A.P. Moeller-Maersk in the form of joint-ventures, mergers or listing.” A solution is expected to be found within 24 months, it said.

Under Andersen, the 112-year-old group sold off a number of units that weren’t related to oil or shipping, including a stake in Danske Bank A/S and shares in a supermarket chain. But he had repeatedly defended the conglomerate structure, arguing the various business units benefited from the synergies that the group structure brought with it.

To contact the reporter on this story: Christian Wienberg in Copenhagen at cwienberg@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Tasneem Hanfi Brögger at tbrogger@bloomberg.net.