Sugar Giant Cosan Mulls Selling Vale Stake on Leverage Woes

In This Article:

(Bloomberg) -- Billionaire Rubens Ometto’s conglomerate Cosan SA is mulling a sale of assets including its $2.2 billion stake in mining giant Vale SA, according to people familiar with the matter, potentially unwinding a soured bet to pay down debt.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Cosan has told investors that all options are on the table to improve its balance sheet, including selling part or all of its 4.1% interest in the iron ore producer, the people said, asking not be identified because discussions aren’t public. The company has also weighed the sale of an Argentine gasoline distributor it owns in a joint venture with Shell Plc, the people said. No final decision has been made.

Cosan SA — a sugar and ethanol empire that has sprawled into everything from lubricant production and gasoline distribution to rail transportation and natural gas home supply — has seen shares plunge to the lowest level in more than four years this month. Investors are skeptical of its ability to spend cash efficiently since its 2022 decision to take on debt to buy a minority stake in Vale, which has since lost value and provided returns deemed “mediocre” by BTG Pactual SA.

“Cosan continually monitors the best deleveraging opportunities and remains committed to optimizing capital allocation, especially in a scenario of high interest rates and a challenging macroeconomic environment,” the company said in a note to Bloomberg News.

Cosan jumped as much as 2.4% after Bloomberg News reported the discussions. Vale dropped as much as 1.7%.

Cosan is contending with high interest rates in Brazil and lower profits from its sugar and ethanol business. The company has also struggled to move forward with plans to sell shares of its lubricant and gas businesses amid a lack of investor appetite.

“Cosan’s leverage grew rapidly over the last few years and that is bringing some scare to investors,” said Marcelo Ornelas, a portfolio manager at Kinitro Capital. “An IPO window would help Cosan to reduce leverage level, but with higher rates now likely there is no room for that. This will make things even harder.”

Ometto, 74, has conceded the Vale investment has been unpopular with investors, “because the market didn’t understand.” Since the operation was announced in October 2022, Cosan shares have fallen 32% in dollar terms. The stock is down 39% this year through Thursday, knocking roughly $2.9 billion off its market value.