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Mergers & Acquisitions

STIC to buy Korean flooring firm Nox from TPG for $336 mn

STIC to make Nox’ Ho Chi Mihn factory as main production base to boost price competitiveness against Chinese rivals

By 3 HOURS AGO

3 Min read

Floor with LVT (Courtesy of Nox)
Floor with LVT (Courtesy of Nox)

Seoul-based private equity firm STIC Investments agreed to acquire global leading luxury vinyl tiles (LVT) flooring firm Nox Corp. at 450 billion won ($336 million) from US alternative investment manager TPG Inc.

STIC signed a stock purchase agreement (SPA) to purchase a 65% stake in South Korea’s Moleem Corp., the parent of Nox, from TPG on Aug. 16, according to investment banking industry sources in Seoul. The South Korean private equity firm, which was selected as a preferred bidder in April, plans to raise the money for the deal through a fund worth about 2 trillion won established last year.

Moleem’s entire stake was estimated at slightly more than 700 billion won, the sources said.

TPG, which bought the 65% for 360 billion won in December 2017, had sought to sell the shares with a corporate valuation of 1 trillion won in 2023. But the attempt failed and the private equity firm headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas, tried to sell the stake again this year.

STIC is also set to TPG’s acquisition financing for the stake purchase under similar conditions. The US firm borrowed 250 billion won in loans with interest rates of 3-4% per annum from South Korea’s Hana Bank and Hana Securities Co.

Those lenders agreed on the takeover as it was advantageous to keep the loans although their interest rates are lower than the current borrowing costs, sources said.

CEO TO KEEP STAKE, POSITION

Moleem founder and CEO Koh Dong-hwan, or Dan DH Koh, decided to keep his remaining 35% stake with a plan to make equity investments in a special purpose company (SPC) for STIC’s takeover.

Koh may seek a premium when STIC sells the controlling stake in the future rather than making an immediate profit, said investment banking industry sources.

He is set to maintain his position, managing the company, global operations and potential takeovers of smaller rivals.

“Koh, the leader of Nox’s success story, is poised to keep the CEO position and continue the partnership with STIC,” said the private equity firm.

GLOBAL BUSINESS

Nox founded in 1994 reported an operating profit of 31 billion won based on sales of 259.1 billion won last year. The company generated 90% of its total sales from overseas markets, especially the US and Europe.

Nox is the world’s top player in the commercial LVT industry with a market share of some 20%.

The global LVT sector was forecast to grow 12% a year on average by 2028 since the tile is rapidly replacing the existing flooring products such as carpets and wood due to its better quality, durability and lower costs.

Luxury hotels, which had installed carpets, increased the use of LVT as COVID-19 raised hygiene awareness. The lounge of Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport and Hermès’ boutiques in the French capital installed LVT.

Nox faced growing competition from its Chinese rivals, which sell products at lower prices by 20% than the South Korean company.

STIC plans to have Nox focus on premium lineups while making its factory in Ho Chi Minh City as main production facility to boost price competitiveness with low labor costs.

The company’s South Korean plant is set to concentrate on manufacturing various models in small quantities, while its US facility in Ohio is likely to benefit from Washington’s push for reshoring.

Write to Ji-Eun Ha at hazzys@hankyung.com
 
Jongwoo Cheon edited this article.
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