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Four consortia of private equity companies are also reported to be eyeing the whole portfolio, with bids valuing the assets at €5 billion to €7 billion (US$6.5 billion-US$9 billion) expected soon, the sources said.
Blackstone, Cinven and Canadian pension fund CPP are set to bid jointly for the assets, while Advent and BC Partners form another consortium, said three sources familiar with the matter.
Two sources said CVC was teaming up with three other limited partners. Bain, Onex and another limited partner form the fourth consortium, the sources said.
A spokeswoman for
In the Reuters report a Holcim spokesman said: “As a general rule, we do not comment on sales processes as these discussions are legally privileged. As announced, the discussions with potential buyers have started in August.”
The Lafarge-Holcim merger, unveiled in April, would create the world's top cement group with $44 billion in yearly sales and would be the industry's biggest ever tie-up, with the move helping both companies slash costs, trim debt and cope better with the rising energy prices and sluggish demand that have hurt the sector since the 2008 economic crisis.
However, competition regulators in some 15 countries, as well as the
The pair is seeking buyers for Holcim's French activities; Lafarge's German ones, and other operations in Austria, Hungary, Romania, Serbia, Britain, Canada, the Philippines, Mauritius and Brazil.
Holcim CEO Bernard Fontana told reporters the companies had received more than 100 expressions of interest from rivals and private equity companies, with several parties indicating a desire to buy the entire portfolio of assets.
Lafarge and Holcim have said they hoped to formally request EU approval for the merger by the end of this month, with an aim to close the deal by the first half of 2015.
CRH is embarking on its own disposal plan under new Chief Executive Albert Manifold and plans to sell at least 10% or €1.5-2 billion worth of net assets.