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Sweden’s Hexpol Acquires US Rubber Compounder Kardoes

Sweden’s Hexpol Acquires US Rubber Compounder Kardoes

Gislaved, Sweden – Polymer band rubber compounder Hexpol has signed an agreement to acquire the business of US-based Kardoes Rubber Co. for $31.8 million.

Kardoes Rubber, with 90 employees at a manufacturing facility in LaFayette, Alabama, had a turnover of $3 million in 2013. The acquisition price will reportedly be paid upon completion of the acquisition, which is expected later this month.

Consolidation of the two businesses is expected in August.

The Hexpol Group develops and manufactures advanced rubber compounds, gaskets for plate heat exchangers, and plastic and rubber materials for truck and castor wheel applications. Customers are primarily OEM manufacturers of plate heat exchangers and trucks, systems suppliers to the global automotive and engineering industries, the energy sector and medical equipment manufacturers.

The Group is organized in two business areas, Hexpol Compounding and Hexpol Engineered Products, which generated slightly more than $8 billion in revenue in 2013 from production units located in Asia, Mexico and Eastern Europe.

Currently, more than 95 percent of sales are to customers outside Sweden.

07/25/2014

 

Starbucks, Juan Valdez in Friendly “Coffee Clash’

Los Angeles, CA – International coffee purveyors, US-based Starbucks and Colombia’s Juan Valdez, have both announced major expansion plans…in each other’s own front yard.

Starbucks has opened the doors at its first operation in Bogota, Colombia – the South American country synonymous with coffee, while Juan Valdez has countered with a new coffeehouse in Miami, Florida.

The new Bogota Starbucks is a three-floor, 2,700-square foot operation, the first of a planned chain of 50 the company plans to open throughout the country over the next five years. It will also be the only Starbucks in the world to serve exclusively only locally-sourced coffee.

Starbucks’ stores in Colombia will be operated as a joint venture with two of the company’s regional Latin American business partners, Alsea and Colcafe, a subsidiary of Grupo Nutresa, Colombia’s largest food company.

Alsea currently operates more than 520 Starbucks in Mexico, Argentina and Chile, while Colcafe worked with Starbucks to develop ‘soluble coffee’ product.

The company has heavily invested in Colombia, which serves as its primary source of arabica coffee, a mainstay of its menu.

In 2012, Starbucks opened a Farmer Support Center in Manizales, Colombia to deliver training and agronomy support to Colombian coffee farmers.

Last summer, Starbucks announced a public-private partnership with the US Agency for International Development that is investing $3 million to increase Colombian coffee yields and to enhance economic opportunities for Colombian coffee growers, according to the company’s website.

Not to be outdone, Colombia’s own Juan Valdez, the coffee brand backed by the Colombian Coffee Growers Federation (Procafecol), is expanding its footprint in Starbuck’s home turf with the opening of a new coffee house in downtown Miami, Florida.

Procafecol, which represents more than 500,000 Colombian coffee-growing families, said it will work with an unnamed Florida franchisor to open four more stores in Miami by the end of this year with an additional 60 sited throughout the state over the next five years.

The new Florida operation isn’t the Colombian company’s first attempt to build a retail chain in the US. It currently operates seven stores in New York, Washington and the Miami International Airport.

The moves by both companies underscores the nature of the ongoing competition for an upscale market that in the US alone generates $18 billion in business annually.

But, whatever the competitive dynamics of the so-called ‘coffee clash’, Juan Valdez will have a long way to go to match the clout of rival Starbucks in Florida and elsewhere.

Customer Loyalty

With 200 stores in Colombia alone, Juan Valdez has garnered a vast reservoir of customer loyalty, both in its home country and regionally.

It is heavily invested in developing Colombia’s country’s coffee industry, a bulwark of the country’s economy. Since its founding in 2003, the coffee chain has funneled more than $20 million to a national fund that supports the country’s 560,000 coffee-growing families, some of whom also own shares in the company.

Most of its 450-plus current cafes are in Latin American countries, though they span as far as South Korea and Kuwait.

There are, however, more than 400 Starbucks in Florida alone, and, while, Procafecol’s total sales are expected to reach $85 million this year, up from $74 million in 2013 and $67 million the previous year, Starbucks is projecting 2014 sales of $16.5 billion, according to reports released by both companies.

There are more than 20,500 Starbucks locations in 65 countries. In 2002, Starbucks opened its first location in Mexico. Since then, the chain has expanded into Latin America with more than 700 stores in 12 countries including Peru, Brazil, Argentina, Costa Rica, and soon, Bolivia and Panama.

Despite the David and Goliath caste to the parallel developments, Procafecol is, at least outwardly, welcoming the competition with the group’s Director of International Sales, Alejandra Londono, was quoted as saying, “There’s room in the market for us both.”

07/25/2014

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

KCS, Global Partners To Develop ‘Oil Train’ Terminal

Kansas City, MO – The Kansas City Southern Railway (KCS) is partnering with New England-based Global Partners LP to develop a unit train terminal in Port Arthur, Texas.

The waterborne terminal, which will be constructed on a 200-acre parcel leased from the KCS by Global Partners, will initially serve as a destination for heavy crude from Western Canada utilizing 340,000 barrels of initial storage capacity.

When fully operational with the commencement of unit train service, the terminal is expected to have an initial capacity of up to 2 unit trains per day.

Construction of the terminal is contingent upon Global Partner’s receipt of all necessary permits.

“The Port Arthur terminal represents a significant opportunity to capitalize on strong demand for the movement of Western Canadian crude initially to one of the world’s premier refining centers in the US Gulf Coast,” said KCS President and Chief Executive Officer David L. Starling.

“Through their established base in the Northeast, North Dakota, Western Canada and the Pacific Northwest, Global,” he said, “has built an outstanding reputation for the quality of its logistics and terminal operations.”

Headquartered in Kansas City, Missouri, Kansas City Southern has railroad investments in the US, Mexico and Panama. Its primary US holding is the Kansas City Southern Railway Company, serving the central and south central US.

Its international holdings include Kansas City Southern de Mexico, S.A. de C.V., serving northeastern and central Mexico and the port cities of Lázaro Cárdenas, Tampico and Veracruz, and a 50 percent interest in Panama Canal Railway Company, which provides ocean-to-ocean freight and passenger service along the Panama Canal.

The railway’s North American rail holdings and strategic alliances are primary components of a NAFTA Railway system, linking the commercial and industrial centers of the US, Mexico and Canada.

Headquartered in Waltham, Massachusetts, Global Partners LP is a purchaser and seller of and logistics provider for domestic US- and Canadian-sourced crude oil and other products by rail across its “virtual pipeline” from the US Midwest and Canada the East and West Coasts for distribution to refiners and other customers.

The company owns, controls or has access to refined petroleum product and renewable fuel terminal networks throughout the US Northeast, and also distributes gasoline, distillates, residual oil and renewable fuels to wholesalers, retailers and commercial customers in New England and New York.

With a portfolio of approximately 900 locations primarily in the Northeast, Global also distributes natural gas and propane, and serves as the independent owner, supplier and operator of gasoline stations and convenience stores across the country.

07/24/2014

ITRenew To Open New Canadian Tech Center

Silicon Valley, CA –ITRenew Inc.’s new operations center in Toronto, Canada, is scheduled to open for business on August 1.

According to the California-based asset disposition software developer, the new Toronto facility, ITRenew will provide a full range of ITAD services including data sanitization and asset refurbishing.

As at all other ITRenew locations, a key focus when processing data center and IT enterprise systems “is to remanufacture and remarket as much equipment as possible,” according to a company statement.

Only when equipment is too old or not healthy enough for reuse will it be recycled in accordance with the facilities’ R2 (Responsible Recycling) certification and ITRenew’s zero-landfill policy. The new facility is also ISO 14001 and ISO 9001 certified with plans to obtain Ontario Electronic Stewardship (OES) certification.

“Canada is an ideal marketplace for ITRenew,” said Namki Yi, General Manager at ITRenew. “As a global company with 15 facilities in 12 countries spanning 4 continents, the expanded Canadian operation will service a market that is currently in need of comprehensive ITAD services.”

ITRenew is a Microsoft Authorized Refurbisher (MAR) and will remarket the remanufactured systems with licensed copies of the Microsoft operating system.

“We are experiencing tremendous growth, both domestically and internationally,” said Yi. “In order to continue the high level of service our customers have become accustomed to, it is now necessary to expand our operations in various locations.”

ITRenew develops solution processes for IT asset disposition, secure data sanitization, IT asset recycling, and IT lifecycle management.

The company serves clients in a variety of business sectors including enterprise IT and data center operations; original equipment manufacturing; internet service and content; finance; media and entertainment; and healthcare.

07/24/2014

 

Giant Russian Steelmaker Shutters US Operations

Los Angeles, CA – Russian steelmaker Severstal is divesting itself of its steel production and coal mining operations in the US.

The move was reportedly motivated by the company’s fears that the increasing tensions between Washington and Moscow over the crisis in Ukraine will reduce, or even cut off, its access to loans from Western financial institutions.

Russia’s second largest steel maker said it would sell its two US steel facilities in Mississippi and Michigan for $2.3 billion to US rivals Steel Dynamics and AK Steel, respectively. Both plants produce steel products for the automotive sector.

According to a statement released by the Severstal, the company reported a $100 million loss on revenue of $3 billion last year, a development that it hopes will be offset by the US divestment.

“The sale of Columbus and Dearborn unlocks substantial value to Severstal’s shareholders,” said Alexey Mordashov, Severstal’s chief executive.

The ‘mini-mill’ in Columbus, Mississippi, is considered one of the most modern in the US, and is expected to increase its operating base by as much as 40 percent.

Steel Dynamics said the $1.6 billion purchase of “one of the most modern mini-mills in North America,” in Columbus, Mississippi, will expand its operating base by 40 percent.

The $700 million purchase of the Dearborn, Michigan, steel plant, “will add about one-third additional capacity to the company’s operations,” said AK Steel.

At the same time, Severstal said that it would sell US coal producer PBS Coals to Toronto, Canada-based Corsa Coal Corp. for a reported $140 million.

The sale comes after the Russian company paid about $1 billion for PBS in 2008 to provide a steady supply of coking coal for its US steelmaking operations.

Corsa said it will pay $60 million in cash, assume $60 million of reclamation and water-treatment liabilities, and give the former Russian owner the balance of $20 million “in collateral for other liabilities.”

The sale of PBS Coals is expected to be completed by mid-August, Severstal said.

PBS is located about 60 miles from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and has 13 developed and three active mines that produced 1.7 million tons of coal last year.

07/23/2014

German’s Contitech Acquires Tennessee’s Cadna Rubber Co.

Memphis, TN – German auto parts supplier ContiTech has strengthened its position in the US automotive aftermarket with its acquisition of Memphis, Tennessee-based US automotive parts distributor Cadna Rubber Co.

“In ContiTech we have found the right technology partner who will help us to achieve our growth objectives in North America ,” says Cadna CEO Devin Hart who will stay on with the company as its General Manager.

ContiTech, he said, “is among the leading suppliers in the Automotive OE market. Our customers will benefit greatly from the industry expertise they provide.”

The US company generated approximately $15 million in sales in 2013.

ContiTech’s parent, Hanover, Germany-headquartered Continental, is a major supplier of brake systems, systems and components for powertrains and chassis, instrumentation, ‘infotainment solutions,’ vehicle electronics, tires and technical elastomers. The company currently employs around 182,000 people in 49 countries.

It’s ContiTech division numbers among the leading suppliers of a host of technical rubber products and is a specialist for plastics technology. The division develops and produces functional parts, components and systems for the automotive industry and other industries. The company currently has a workforce of approximately 29,700 employees.

7/23/2014

Beechcraft Delivers First King Air 350ER Aircraft to Mexican Navy

Wichita, KS – Beechcraft Corporation has delivered the first of four Beechcraft King Air 350ER aircraft ordered by the Mexican Navy Secretaría de Marina (SEMAR).

In addition to the aircraft, Kansas-headquartered Beechcraft will support SEMAR with on-the-ground service, support and training through its Global Mission Support organization, the company said.

Rear Admiral Jose Marie Macedo, Director General of Naval Aviation Operations, visited company headquarters in Wichita, to accept delivery of the aircraft, which will be stationed at the naval base in Veracruz.

The remaining three aircraft will be delivered by the second quarter of 2015.

The company was a major exhibitor at the recent Farnsborough, UK Airshow, displaying its specially modified Beechcraft King Air 350ER.

The aircraft is operated out of Northern Europe and fitted with a mission package that supports search and rescue, fishery inspection, pollution monitoring and seaway/shipping lane surveillance missions.

The King Air 350ER was selected for these missions due to its high dash speeds, long endurance, high reliability and low operating cost.

07/22/2014

Prologis Acquires Warehouse Properties in Poland, Hungary

San Francisco, CA – Industrial real estate leasor Prologis Inc. has acquired two major logistics facilities in Poland and Hungary. The properties total more than one million square feet of warehouse space and are 100 percent leased.

The first is a 610,000 square foot warehouse in Gliwice, Poland. The facility is occupied by Tesco, a multinational grocery retailer and repeat customer. The property has immediate access to two trans-European road networks, enabling efficient transportation of goods.

The second is a 404,000 square foot building in Budapest, Hungary, occupied by global retailer, Auchan and is located near the city’s international airport, approximately 20 miles from the city center.

“These properties are excellent additions to our portfolios in Poland and Hungary,” said Ben Bannatyne, managing director, Prologis Central & Eastern Europe. “Both are in key locations along major commercial routes that are growing in importance due to an increase in intra-regional trade in Central and Eastern Europe.”

As of March 31, the company owns and manages approximately 152 million square feet of logistics and distribution space in Europe.

ProLogis leases modern distribution facilities to more than 4,700 customers, including manufacturers, retailers, transportation companies, third-party logistics providers and other enterprises in 21 countries in the Americas, Europe and Asia.

07/21/2014

US High Tech Trade Tops $1 Trillion: White Paper

Los Angeles, CA – The trade in US-produced technology goods and services currently tops more than $1 trillion, according to a new industry white paper published by the TechAmerica Foundation (TAF).

Tech imports totaled $351 billion compared to $205 billion in exports in 2013, while tech service exports exceeded imports $303 billion to $161 billion in imports in 2011, the most recent year complete data are available, the group said.

Many of the goods imported into the US “are part of a global supply chain, where US multinational companies create and design tech products in the US and produce the finalized product overseas,” according to the paper.

In these cases, “the bulk of the profit from the products is accrued to the US firm. Often the importation of a technology good represents an ‘intra-company’ transfer as US firms brings their products into the United States for sale from their overseas production facilities,” it added.

The US currently has a tech trade surplus of nearly $5 billion when both tech goods and services are combined, with $501 billion in exports compared with $496 billion in imports.  Goods exports and imports have been fairly flat for the last three years after rebounding as a result of the 2009 global market crash.

“The largest destinations for tech goods go to our closest trading partners, Mexico and Canada, which is a testament to the importance of free trade agreements to the American technology industry,” said Burak Guvensoylar, manager of government affairs at the TAF.

The US has free trade agreements with 20 countries, and is looking to create two new large scale agreements – the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and the Transatlantic Trade & Investment Partnership (TTIP).

These new agreements, in addition to the Trade in Services Agreement, and the expansion of the Information Technology Agreement, could expand US free trade markets to 53 countries, “creating significant opportunities for US technology companies” by “increasing market access, eliminating tariffs, strengthening intellectual property rights, and ensuring the movement of data across the globe,” said Guvensoylar.

Telecommunications, Texas Lead the Way

According to the white paper , the US telecommunications sector, in particular, feeds the rate of tech goods and services exports, noted by the 9 percent increase in telecommunications services from 2011-2012 and the 6.6 percent increase in communications goods from 2012-2013.

Other key tech services include systems design, software, research and development, testing, and Internet services such as cloud computing and mobility strategy, it said.

From a state-by-state perspective, Texas continued to build on its status as the leading state by tech goods exports, growing from $45.1 billion in 2012 to $48.2 billion in 2013, a 6.7 percent growth rate, compared to a national growth rate of 0.8 percent.

California is a close second to Texas in revenue of exports, but the state saw a 5.1 percent decline in year-to-year exports. Texas and California combine to account for 44 percent of the country’s overall volume of tech good exports.

The TechAmerica Foundation is a non-profit technology industry research group headquartered in Washington, DC.

07/21/2014

BRICs Meet in Brazil, Create Bloc Development Bank

Los Angeles, CA – Leaders of the BRICS group of emerging powers – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – have decided to create their own development bank as a counterweight to what they perceive are “western-dominated” financial organizations like the US-based World Bank and International Monetary Fund.

The move came during the BRICS Summit earlier this week in Fortaleza, Brazil. The summit comes as the five countries, whose economies together represent 18 percent of the world total, are experiencing sharp slowdowns in their once fast-paced rates of growth.

The new development bank will reportedly be based in Shanghai and is expected to be functional within two years. It will be capitalized at $50 billion, a figure that could grow to $100 billion to fund infrastructure projects. The fund would also have $100 billion at its disposal to weather economic hard times.

The new development bank’s first director will reportedly be from India.

“We remain disappointed and seriously concerned with the current non-implementation of the 2010 International Monetary Fund (IMF) reforms, which negatively impacts on the IMF’s legitimacy, credibility and effectiveness,” the group said in a joint press release.

The BRICs leaders are now in the Brazilian capital of Brasilia, meeting with their counterparts from Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela and several other Latin American nations to discuss future economic and trade cooperation.

BRIC giant China is particularly interested in Latin America. After this week’s discussions, Chinese President Xi Jinping will stay in Brazil to launch a China-Latin America forum with the leaders of several regional countries including Cuba, Argentina, Ecuador, and Venezuela.

China is growing in influence in the region. Last year, the country, two-way trade with the region amounted to more than $261 billion.

07/17/2014