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Martin Marietta to Buy Lhoist North America in $13.5B Deal

  • Martin Marietta to fund the deal with $7 billion cash and $6.5 billion in shares
  • The Berghmans family would own roughly 15% of Martin Marietta after deal closes
  • Deal would ​add 2 billion tons of limestone reserves in Sun Belt corridors

June 29 (Reuters) - Martin Marietta Materials said on Monday it would merge with limestone supplier Lhoist North America in a cash-and-stock deal worth $13.5 billion, as the building ​materials firm looks to tap growing demand for lime products.

Shares of the ​Raleigh, North Carolina-based company were down 5% in morning trade.

Martin Marietta will ⁠use a mix of $7 billion in cash along with shares valued at $6.5 billion ​to fund the deal, the company said. It expects to realize about $85 million in ​annual run-rate cost synergies.

CEO Ward Nye said demand for high-quality lime products is expected to remain resilient for decades to come, due to investment in infrastructure, advanced manufacturing, energy development and industrial ​expansion in the U.S.

There has been a surge in dealmaking in the U.S. ​building-products industry as the data center construction business booms, along with new housing, repairs and renovations.

Last ‌week, ⁠Ireland's CRH said it would acquire Arcosa in an all-cash deal valued at about $8.5 billion, in a bid to capitalize on rising demand for U.S. energy and utility infrastructure.

Lhoist's Berghmans family - which owns Belgian industrial company Lhoist Group - would own roughly 15% of Martin ​Marietta upon the deal's ​close.

The transaction would ⁠add quarries, production facilities, distribution terminals and 2 billion tons of limestone reserves in Sun Belt metropolitan corridors to Martin Marietta's ​portfolio.

Morgan Stanley analyst Angel Castillo said while the deal adds ​more end ⁠markets and some complexity, it comes with material expansion into attractive infrastructure markets which "we view as a high-quality form of diversification."

Lhoist North America makes hi-calcium lime, dolomitic lime and ⁠industrial ​mineral products used in domestic steel manufacturing, infrastructure and ​heavy non-residential construction across North America.

The deal is expected to be completed in the second half of ​2026, subject to regulatory approvals.

Reporting by Anshuman Tripathy in Bengaluru; Editing by Devika Syamnath

Source: Reuters

 


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