A government-led buyout signals more uncertainty ahead for a chip industry grappling with oversupply and geopolitics. The state-backed Japan Investment Corp will take over JSR , which makes light-sensitive chemicals vital to manufacturing semiconductors, among other things. It will help Tokyo bolster its technology supply chains as the country looks to capitalise on jitters around Taiwan, home to many major chipmakers and suppliers.
. In contrast, JSR is in a position of financial strength. In recent years, the conglomerate has pivoted from a low-margin business of selling synthetic rubber used to make tyres to focus on semiconductor materials - primarily photoresists - and biopharmaceuticals. Operating profit in the year to March 2024 isby the company to increase a punchy 43%. Before Monday's announcement which sent shares up their maximum 22%, the stock was up 25% since the start of the year.
The enthusiastic reception is warranted. The offer values JSR at just under $7 billion, including net debt. That's more than 13 times analyst forecasts for current fiscal year's EBITDA, per Refinitiv, well above the average 9 times multiple listed rivals, including the $65 billion giant Shin-Etsu ChemicalYet JIC's mandate to boost the country’s global competitiveness and its focus on consolidating industries helps to justify the hefty premium.
That fits with Tokyo's ambitions to revive the country's prowess in designing and manufacturing cutting-edge semiconductors - a sector now dominated by chipmakers in the United States, Taiwan and South Korea. Key to that will be maintaining Japan's status as a key supplier of materials, tools and chemicals like the ones JSR produces.
The buyer’s plan to delist the company, and relist it in five to seven years, might also indicate it wants the company to aggressively expand at the expense of its bottom line. Either way, the government's focus on elevating national chipmaking champions creates fresh uncertainty for JSR's foreign customers like South Korea's Samsung Electronics
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