Imerys S.A.
Imerys S.A.
Tour Maine-Montparnasse
33, avenue du Maine
75755 Paris Cedex 15
France
Telephone: (+33) (1) 45 38 48 48
Fax: +33(1)45 38 74 78
Web site: http://www.imerys.com
Public Company
Incorporated: 1880 as Société Le Nickel
Employees: 14,583
Sales: EUR 2.80 billion ($2.5 billion) (2000)
Stock Exchanges: Euronext Paris
NAIC: 212325 Clay and Ceramic and Refractory Minerals Mining; 421320 Brick, Stone, and Related Construction Material Wholesalers; 3271 Clay Product and Refractory Manufacturing; 212324 Kaolin and Ball Clay Mining
Known as Imetal until 1999, Imerys S.A. has transformed itself into one of the world’s major minerals and materials processing groups. After exiting its historic metals processing activities at the end of last century, Imerys operates through four primary business groups: Building Materials; Refractories & Abrasives; Ceramics & Specialties; and Pigments & Additives. The company’s Building Materials activities, which accounted for 22 percent of the company’s sales in 2000, include a leadership position in the French market for clay roof tiles and bricks. Imerys’s Refractories & Abrasives division, adding another 21 percent to sales, makes the company the world leader in mining and production of minerals for these product markets. The company is world leader in the market for raw materials and ceramic bodies, including clay and kaolin, and in high-performance graphite production through its Ceramics & Specialties division, which produced 12 percent of sales in 2000. Pigments & Additives, however, boosted by the company’s takeover of English China Clays in 1999—which prompted its name change—remains the company’s largest sales generator, with 45 percent of Imerys’s EUR 2.8 billion in sales in 2000.
Nickel Mining in the 19th Century
Imerys’s history dates back to 1863 in the French colony of New Caledonia, when Jules Gamier, an engineer, discovered important nickel deposits. Some ten years later, together with Henri Marbeau, he founded La Société de Traitement des Minerais de Nickel, Cobalt et Autres. Four years later, in 1880, Gamier and Marbeau’s company merged with Higginson et Hanckar to form the company’s direct predecessor, Société Le Nickel (SLN). Although its headquarters were located in Paris, the SLN built small factories near Marseilles and a blast furnace at Nouméa, New Caledonia. Its early progress was encouraging. However, the first nickel crisis in 1884 slowed down its activities, and after the closing of the main factory at Chaleix, Gamier and Marbeau were forced to relocate production to France, Britain, and Germany.
This was the era of tall sailing ships of 3,000 to 5,000 tons, that were able to cross in 100 days and to transport around 60,000 tons of minerals annually. These transported nickel from New Caledonia to Europe until World War I interrupted the company’s expansion. By the end of the war, only the Le Havre factory had escaped damage. The SLN took nearly 15 years to recover from the disaster. In 1931 it entered into partnership with the Société Caledonia and created Calédonickel, a company that managed the large factory of Doniambo, near Nouméa. Six years later, having absorbed Calédonickel, the SLN was the only company exploiting nickel in New Caledonia and was already producing 10 percent of the world’s nickel consumption. Calédonickel and, more generally, the SLN were not only responsible for considerable improvements in the Caledonian economy but also played a leading role in the urbanization and social development of the island. They took on workers from abroad, but also trained and employed natives. During World War II, the Doniambo factory’s output reached the United States, since a great part of it was sent to help in the construction of U.S. weapons. Although these transactions increased SLN’s international status, the war left the company in a precarious state. The need was felt to concentrate and modernize its structure and equipment. This process took SLN about ten years, but in 1950 the company’s nickel production (6,900 tons) finally exceeded that of 1939 (6,700 tons). In spite of several other crises, the next 20 years saw the continuation of SLN’s development from the level of a cottage industry to that of an advanced technology company.
Peñarroya, which was to merge with SLN in 1967, had grown rapidly in parallel with SLN. Although both companies were partly owned by the Rothschild empire, which had been one of the founders of Peñarroya, they had separate identities, management, and operations. Created in 1881 by Charles Leroux in order to exploit the coal and lead mines of the Andalusian village that gave its name to the company, Peñarroya, after a very difficult start, made great progress at the beginning of the 20th century. For his efforts, Charles Leroux received a medal at the Paris Universal Exhibition (Exposition Universelle) of 1900. In 1910, Peñarroya’s new chairman, Frédéric Leroux, decided to extend the company’s activities beyond Spain. World War I had little effect on Peñarroya, since Spain was not at war with Germany, and the company rapidly turned to the exploitation of nonferrous metals in the Mediterranean basin. It prospected for zinc in North Africa and its French colonies, in Greece, and in Italy. After the shock of World War II, Peñarroya expanded as far as South America and Mauritania, under the influence of the new chairman René Fillon, who used to work for the Banque Rothschild and whose tenure would last until 1961. Peñarroya then became a world leader in zinc but also produced silver, cadmium, germanium, and later—in association with Mokta—uranium and aluminum. In 1961 the company’s structure was redefined and Peñarroya found itself in need of a new chairman to replace René Fillon. The Rothschild group proposed Georges Pompidou, who was, however, unable to accept the offer as he was shortly to become prime minister of France. It was therefore Guy de Rothschild himself who became chairman, this being the first time that a Rothschild had personally participated in the management of one of the family’s businesses. He also recruited Bernard de Villeméjane, the future chairman of Imetal.
Modernizing in the 1960s
On his arrival at Peñarroya, Guy de Rothschild found that there were numerous problems to solve. To modernize the company’s plant, he introduced a new zinc furnace. The commercial problems were more serious, as Peñarroya was not able to sell its own products. Rothschild established and bought small businesses to counterbalance Peñarroya’s losses and entered into partnership with several other companies, which included Pech-iney, the iron and steel leader. Throughout this period, Rothschild actively sought new sources of financing and revenue. After the metal crisis of 1967, when metal prices plunged, this search gave birth to Imetal.
The year 1967 was important for both SLN and Peñarroya. Through COFIRED, a company owned by the Compagnie du Nord, itself belonging to the Rothschilds, which bought 50 percent of Peñarroya’s capital and gave it back to SLN, SLN became the majority shareholder in Peñarroya and therefore controlled it. Yet until 1970, although the two companies were run along the same lines, they retained separate management and headquarters. In 1970, just before the takeover of Mokta, the companies eventually merged and become a single group, SLN-Peñarroya. The nomination of Bernard de Villeméjane as president of the group coincided in 1971 with Mokta’s entry into the group, through a public offer of exchange which was accepted by 92 percent of Mokta’s shareholders. Created in 1865 to exploit magnetic iron ore deposits in Mokta-el-Hadid, Algeria, Mokta had developed slowly under the control of the Suez Bank. It diversified primarily into manganese and uranium and later became a holding company. With iron interests in Spain, manganese in Gabon and Morocco, and—most importantly—uranium in France, Nigeria, Gabon, and Canada, Mokta was only fully absorbed by Imetal in 1980.
The three Rothschild companies were now faced with the merger of Pechiney and Ugine-Kuhlmann, their direct competitors, in 1971. Three years later, in 1974, the Rothschild group became an industrial holding company. A new name, Imetal, was chosen for its modern connotations although it had no actual meaning. It was a public limited company with headquarters in the 15th arrondissement of Paris and moved in 1977 into the 51st floor of the famous Tour Montparnasse. This concentration and merging was, of course, part of the logical continuation of SLN’s growth policy, but was also prompted by the international oil crisis of 1973 that affected the nickel industry more directly in 1975. Although Mokta and its uranium survived the energy crisis quite well, the 30 percent decrease in construction as well as the fall in prices and of the dollar deeply affected the group. Imetal did not recover fully from the crisis until the end of the 1980s.
However, one year after its formation Imetal was to receive international attention through the highly publicized Cop-perweld case. Imetal was trying to expand into the United States and made a takeover bid for Copperweld, a company created in 1915 that manufactured specialty tubing, bimetallic wire, and alloy steel. Copperweld’s employees and management opposed the bid and took the case to court. The court decision in favor of Imetal provoked protests by U.S. workers in the streets of Washington, D.C., and New York. The anti-French movement reached its climax and was fueled by antisemitic slogans directed against Baron Guy de Rothschild. The latter eventually came to Pittsburgh to defend his company and succeeded in turning opinion in his favor. He ended by acquiring 67 percent of Copperweld, and later gained complete ownership.
Rothschild did not stop there, and on his way toward internationalization he bought 25 percent of the Lead Industries Group, formed in 1930 as the result of the amalgamation of a number of U.K. lead manufacturers in the 1920s. Then through Mokta, Imetal managed to take over the largest private uranium-ore company in France, la Compagnie Française des Minerais d’Uranium. The latter is now a major subsidiary of Mokta.
Company Perspectives:
Imerys pursues a value-creating growth strategy: using its substantial mineral reserves and sophisticated processing expertise, the Group supplies technically advanced products that are essential to the success of a diversified customer base.
These events were followed in 1976 by the creation of Minemet, which combined in a single entity all of the marketing companies of the Imetal group, together with Minemet Recherche, a subsidiary conducting the major part of its operations at the Trappes Research Center, near Paris, which was opened in 1972. In 1979, Guy de Rothschild, who had passed the retirement age laid down by the company, was obliged to resign, and, Bernard de Villeméjane became chairman of Imetal. In 1980, when SLN celebrated its 100th anniversary, Imetal’s consolidated profits totaled FFr 200 million, to which Copperweld had made a major contribution. However, Bernard de Villeméjane had to face another crisis, mainly affecting nickel production and caused by recession in the minerals market. The industry was, if not depressed, certainly in stagnation. Change was urgently needed and the possibility of a change of product line gradually became apparent.
Shifting Focus in the 1980s
At the beginning of the 1980s, Bernard de Villeméjane took a series of measures to reduce the importance of uranium and minerals in Imetal’s activities. In his opinion, they were no longer profitable. First, in 1983, he conceded the majority of SLN’s shares to Eramet and the latter became Eramet-SLN, of which Imetal now controls only 15 percent. In 1986 the situation had deteriorated still further and Imetal’s losses amounted to FFr 586 million. Mokta, which was partly responsible for this, was sold to Cogéma in 1986. In 1987 it was Penarroya’s turn; Imetal’s share in the company was reduced from 59 percent to 34.1 percent and later to 15 percent. Penarroya in the early 1990s was owned by Metaleurop. As Bernard de Villeméjane explained to Le Nouvel Economiste, on August 21, 1987, “Ten years ago, uranium and mining represented 80 percent of our activity. Today, it is less than one fifth.”
As it was moving away from its old activities, Imetal was buying new companies and specializing in construction materials. It obtained 100 percent control of Huguenot Fenal, a company constmcting roof shingles and with many affiliates. Imetal then bought the Industrie Regionale du Bôtiment (IRB), which included ten companies. Imetal’s move into the construction materials sector and its subsequent financial recovery were spectacular. From losses of FFr 586 million in 1986, the group had moved to profits of FFr 550 million in 1988. After this success, Bernard de Villeméjane decided to diversify into baked clay, tiling, ceramics, and brick. These seem incongruous activities for a mining group but as its chairman stated in Entreprises, December 12, 1988, “it appears to be different from what we used to do, but in reality it does correspond to our company culture.” Indeed, the manufacturing technique employed in construction materials is not far removed from that used in nonferrous metals; both rely on the use of kilns. The success of Imetal in this sector can also be explained by the company’s considerable experience in energy conservation and the way in which Imetal used this experience to adapt itself to an increasingly competitive sector such as constmction.
After the purchase of la Société Gélis-Poudenx-Sans— shingles and bricks—and the Groupe de la Financière d’Angers—slate—in 1989, Imetal became the world leader in shingles and the foremost brick producer in France. Yet Imetal’s outlook remained if not regional, at the most national. Naturally, the next step would be internationalization in its new sector. “We are on the threshold of a European development phase” said Imetal’s chairman, in La Cote Desfossée, April 4, 1989. Its first two partners were Italy and Germany, through Metaleurop, created in association with Preussag. Then came the United Kingdom, in the form of Steely, a company with which Imetal entered into partnership in September 1990, for the distribution of its products in the United Kingdom. Imetal also maintained good relations with the United States and, having bought all the remaining shares in Copperweld, Imetal acquired CE-Minerals, a subsidiary of Asea Brown Boveri and an important producer of clay.
Materials Group for the 21st Century
“Imetal” was becoming more and more of a misnomer. The company had definitely passed from the nonferrous metal industry to that of constmction materials, although its dramatic success in the sector had not kept it from maintaining its former and traditional activities. Although the company tried very hard to justify these changes and to make them seem consistent, there was a paradox in the fact that this company, which once had an enormous network of international branches, was—in 1989— “on the threshold of a European development phase.” In spite of its brilliant successes in its new field, Imetal had entered a sector far less prestigious and far more competitive, especially on a European scale, than its former field. As Bernard de Villeméjane stated in l’Usine Nouvelle, on November 11, 1989, “Making money in sectors that one may find less glamorous, is preferable to losing money in other, more prestigious sectors.”
Key Dates:
- 1863:
- Jules Gamier discovers nickel deposits in New Caledonia.
- 1873:
- With Henri Marbeau, Gamier founds La Société de Traitement des Minerais de Nickel, Cobalt et Autres.
- 1880:
- Company merges with Higginson et Hanckar to form Société Le Nickel (SLN).
- 1881:
- Charles Leroux founds Penarroya.
- 1937:
- SLN merges with Calédonickel.
- 1967:
- SLN merges with Penarroya.
- 1974:
- Company changes name to Imetal S.A.
- 1989:
- Imetal purchases Société Gelis-Poudenx-Sans and Groupe de la Financière d’Angers.
- 1999:
- Company takes over English China Clays pic for £756 million; changes name to Imerys S.A.
- 2001:
- Imerys acquires Industrial Minerals division of Hecla Mining Company.
Imetal’s move away from metals processing took on steam in the 1990s, as the company began adding to its minerals and construction materials operations. In 1992, the company acquired the United States’ Dry Branch Kaolin (DBK), based in Georgia, and began building those operations into the world’s number three producer of paper-grade kaolin. DBK was only the first of a vast acquisition program carried out during the decade that completely transformed the company. Imetal’s acquisitions, ranging from minerals processors in China to its 1995 purchase of Lonza Graphites and Technologies, boosting its graphites production operations, were to double the company’s size in just five years. Among the company’s acquisitions during the mid-1990s were Georgia Marble, in the United States, adding calcium carbonate production; Timcal, of Switzerland, and Stratmin, of Canada, further boosting the company’s graphite operations; C-E Minerals, in the United States, and Plibrico, in Luxembourg, both refractories producers; Ceratera, in France, boosting its clay production; and Refral, in France, and Lombra et Cedonosa, in Spain, enhancing the company’s portfolio of technical ceramics production. The company, now led by CEO and Chairman Patrick Kron, continued to seek to gain new scale.
The 1999 takeover of English China Clays—world leader in kaolin production with a 39 percent market share—gave Imetal more than 50 percent of that market and completed the company’s transformation. The takeover offer, initially rejected by English China Clays, was finally accepted for a price of £756 million. As a result of its new acquisition, Imetal moved to shed its metals division, selling off its Copperweld subsidiaries in the United States and Canada. The company then changed its name, inventing Imerys to promote its reinvented organization. The company’s minerals processing sales had nearly doubled, rising past EUR 2 billion in 1999.
Acquisitions continued to play a major role in Imerys’s growth at the turn of the century. In 2000, the company’s acquisitions included Honaik, in Malaysia, giving it a foothold in the fast-growing specialty pigments market. That year, the company also acquired the ceramic bodies production operations for Portugal’s Vista Alegre, boosting its position in that market in southern Europe. Announcing growing sales, which topped EUR 2.8 billion in 2000, Imerys began the year 2001 with the purchase of the Industrial Minerals division of Hecla Mining Company, based in the United States, giving Imerys the leadership in the sector in both the North American and European markets. Imerys’s aggressive growth strategy, if not quite as glamorous as its Imetal past, assured its future position among the world’s leading mineral processing companies.
Principal Subsidiaries
Huguenot Fenal; Industrie Régionale du Bâtiment; Gélis-Poudenx-Sans; Financière d’Anger (98%); Mircal; Copperweld (U.S.A.).
Principal Operating Units
Building Materials; Refractories & Abrasives; Ceramics & Specialties; Pigments & Additives.
Principal Competitors
Asahi Glass Company, Limited; CRH plc; ELEMENTIS plc; Engelhard Corporation; Hanson PLC; Hecla Mining Company; Lafarge SA; National Refractories & Minerals Corporation; Owens Corning Corporation; Compagnie de Saint-Gobain; Wienerberger Baustoffindustrie AG; Zemex Corporation.
Further Reading
Baron, Benoit, and Chantai Colomer, “Les Fers au Feu Internationaux d’Imetal,” La Cote Desfossées, April 6, 1990.
Black, Ralph, “Les Grandes Options de la Stratégie de Peñarroya-Le Nickel,” Les Echos, January 25, 1971.
Bouvier, Jean, Les Rothschild, Paris: Edition Complexe, 1983.
Gout, Didier, “Imetal se Construit un Nouvel Avenir,” l’Usine Nouvelle, November 16, 1989.
“Imerys Accede Au Premier Rang Mondial Des Abrasifs,” La Tribune, May 10, 2000
“Imerys se renforce aux Etat-Unis,” La Tribune, March 1, 2001
“Imetal May Sell Metals Processing Division,” Financial Times, June 7, 1999.
Le Nickel-SLN, 1880–1980, 100 ans d’une entreprise et d’une industrie, Paris: SLN, 1980.
Peñarroya, 1881–1981, histoire d’une société, Paris: Peñarroya, 1981.
Rothschild, Guy de, Si j’ai Bonne Mémoire, Paris: Belfond, 1983.
—Sonia Kronlund
—update: M.L. Cohen