China’s Tsinghua University unit to buy aluminium firm for $3.7bn

State-run Tsinghua, which counts President Xi Jinping among its alumni, has interests in a number of companies. (Image: Tsinghua University Instagram)

BEIJING, June 12 (Reuters) – A unit of Beijing’s Tsinghua University on Tuesday said it would buy aluminium smelter Tianshan Aluminium for an estimated 23.6 billion yuan ($3.7 billion), in what analysts say is a way for the smelter to become a publicly traded entity.

Xiamen Unigroup Xue Co Ltd, a Shenzhen-listed education services provider controlled by Tsinghua, said in a statement that it would pay in cash and shares to acquire 100 percent of Xinjiang-based Tianshan over an unspecified time frame, with the final price undetermined. It did not detail reasons behind the acquisition.

“Right now the overall plan is still being discussed,” a Unigroup official told Reuters by phone on condition of anonymity as details were still private. “After the plan is finalised, it will be handed over to the board of directors.”

State-run Tsinghua, which counts President Xi Jinping among its alumni, has interests in a number of companies, including a 1.5 percent stake in Chinese aluminium products distributor Ningbo Fubang Jingye, held via Tsinghua Unigroup.

Xiamen Unigroup’s acquisition comes in an industry that in May saw state-owned Aluminum Corp of China (Chinalco) enter a cooperation deal with Yunnan Metallurgical Group Co Ltd.

Xiamen Unigroup, whose shares are currently suspended from trade pending asset restructuring, said in May it planned to buy an aluminium firm in China’s northwestern Xinjiang region, without disclosing the target or deal value.

Tianshan has annual aluminium smelting capacity of 1.4 million tonnes, according to Zhang Rufeng, a manager at commodities consultancy Baiinfo. In agreeing to the transaction, it is likely aiming for a “backdoor listing” to make the company publicly tradable via Xiamen Unigroup’s listing, Zhang said.

An official at Tianshan declined to comment, while Unigroup did not respond to an emailed request for comment.

($1 = 6.4037 Chinese yuan)

(Reporting by Tom Daly; Editing by Tom Hogue)