Tesla supplier LG Chem approves plan to split off battery business

Reuters

Published Oct 29, 2020 09:29PM ET

Updated Oct 30, 2020 03:05AM ET

By Heekyong Yang and Hyunjoo Jin

SEOUL (Reuters) - LG Chem shareholders on Friday approved a plan to separate its battery business into a new company, paving the way for a potential public listing to finance expansion.

The unit, which will be launched on Dec. 1, will first become a wholly-owned subsidiary tentatively named LG Energy Solutions, and then up to 30% of the company's shares may be listed in an initial offering in about a year.

LG Chem is the world's top battery maker supplying Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) Inc and General Motors Co (NYSE:GM).

"While the battery business is expected to post enormous growth, competition is intensifying from not only other battery makers but automakers," LG Chem Chief Executive Officer Hak Cheol Shin told a shareholder meeting in Seoul.

"We have decided to separate our battery business to better optimise our management in today's fast-changing market environment."

More than 82% of LG Chem shareholders who attended the meeting voted in favour of the plan, the source said. LG Chem declined to comment.

"With the split-off of the battery business, we can use various fundraising options to expand investments at the right time, and based on this we can secure a clear global No.1 position by widening the gap with rivals," LG Chem Chief Financial Official Cha Dong-seok said.

The company's growth was constrained by rising debts as a result of a sharp increase in capacity investments, he added.

Shares of LG Chem closed down 6.1% versus a 2.6% fall in the benchmark KOSPI.

Asked about selling stakes to strategic investors in the run-up to the IPO, Shin told Reuters the company was reviewing various options.

Hwang Yu-sik, an analyst at NH Investment & Securities, said that as a standalone company the battery business would be able to better raise money including through an IPO to expand its production capacity.