Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeIndyIncitec Pivot quiet on sell-off ‘speculation’

Incitec Pivot quiet on sell-off ‘speculation’

By NOEL MURPHY

INCITEC Pivot’s fertiliser operations could be sold off after the company posted half-year earnings $50 million less than expected, according to reports this week.
The fertiliser division, worth about $2 billion a year, produces three million tonnes of fertiliser annually.
Incitec Pivot Limited has a fertiliser blending plant and bagging and warehouse complex at Lara and a manufacturing and administration complex at North Shore.
Finance media reports said a prospective buyer was apparently working with advisers, although negotiations were still at an early stage.
Incitec Pivot boss James Fazzino was reported as saying the company’s main business was in explosives rather than fertilisers.
Industry figures such as Terra Industries have said consolidation of Australia’s fertiliser sector is inevitable, with Incitec Pivot has long deemed a likely candidate for demerger.
The company decline to comment on the reports.
“We do not comment on market speculation,” an IPL spokesman told the Independent.
Incitec Pivot’s Geelong operations employ 50 permanent staff and up to 50 contractors.
Two months ago the company said the jobs appeared safe despite a $50 million earnings plunge in the first half of the fiscal year.
The company was expecting a stronger showing in the second half.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Revving for mental health

Registrations are now open for a Geelong motorcycle event that encourages conversations about depression and suicide prevention. Black Dog Ride’s ‘One Dayer’ will...

Community calendar

More News

Where love never dies

The ancient Greek myth of Orpheus is a story of love, loss and remembrance. In the original tale, the famous bard of the same name...

Community calendar

Ballroom dance Leopold Hall, 805-809 Bellarine Hwy, Saturday 31 January, 7.30pm-10.30pm, $10 includes supper, music Kevin. Sunday 1 February, 2pm-4.30pm, $5 bring small plate to...

Starray gives bang for buck

The Geely Starray EM-i sounds like something out of an old sci-fi movie. But it’s not and if you think that name is quirky, what...

From the archives

18 years ago 1 February, 2008 Thirty-five Geelong Aborigines will seek compensation after the Rudd Government says sorry to the “stolen generation”, according to Wathaurong Aboriginal...

Local archery legend acknowledged

Leopold’s John Womersley has dedicated his life to the sport of archery. Mr Womersley, 88, was a foundational member and two-time president of local club...

Saeid Nahavandi AO

Distinguished Professor Saeid Nahavandi contributes his knowledge and skills to tertiary education, engineering, robotics, and haptics research and innovation, as well as defence capability...

All for Geelong

Born and bred in Geelong, Michael Betts has never wanted to live and work anywhere else. On Australia Day Mr Betts, 74, was awarded a...

Buttered Loaf bring the funk

For a quarter of a century groove-based jam band Buttered Loaf have been entertaining music lovers across Melbourne. Throughout the early 2000s, Wednesday night was...

Dr Gillian Miles (AM)

For Dr Gillian Miles, the transport and infrastructure sectors present a range of puzzles that she loves to try and solve. The...

Creatives develop Surf Coast

Artists across the Surf Coast Shire can transform ideas into realities and explore new boundaries within their work through the latest Creative Development Grants...