(Reuters) - DuPont Co struck a deal to sell its slow-growing car paint business to private equity firm Carlyle Group LP for $4.9 billion cash as it seeks to focus on higher-growth areas such as agriculture and nutrition.
The sale of DuPont Performance Coatings would remove the lowest-margin and slowest-growth business from the chemical company's portfolio, and allow DuPont to cut debt and make acquisitions in priority areas that also include advanced materials and biotechnology.
"This transaction is consistent with our ... long-term strategy of driving competitive advantages in agriculture and nutrition, advanced materials and biotechnology, which represent high-growth, high-margin opportunities," DuPont Chief Executive Ellen Kullman said in announcing the deal on Thursday.
"After a careful review, we have determined that DPC's full growth potential would be best realized outside DuPont and through the sale to Carlyle," Kullman said.
The sale caps a nearly eight-month-long auction of the car paint unit, which has 11,000 employees and is expected to generate revenues of more than $4 billion this year.
Washington, D.C.-based Carlyle outbid Apollo Global Management LLC
Reuters on Wednesday reported that DuPont was nearing a deal to sell the business to Carlyle this week.
DuPont's performance coatings business primarily sells to Maaco and other auto paint refinishers. Ford Motor Co
After the sale, expected to close in the 2013 first quarter subject to regulatory approvals, DuPont said it will still generate more than $3 billion through sales of advanced materials to the auto industry.
As part of the transaction, Carlyle will assume $250 million of DuPont's unfunded pension liabilities.
DuPont shares were up 1 percent to $50.53 in premarket trading. The stock closed at $49.94 on Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.
Buyout firms, flush with capital they are looking to put to work and backed by readily available financing for leveraged buyouts, have been snapping up assets being carved out of conglomerates.
Carlyle has been particularly active of late, committing $1 billion in private equity in the second quarter and announcing deals since then for which it will commit at least $1.6 billion, co-Chief Executive William Conway said on August 8.
In July, Carlyle and BC Partners agreed to buy industrial businesses of United Technologies Corp's
Carlyle has a long track record of dealmaking in the automotive and industrial sectors. Its previous and current investments include Allison Transmission
Credit Suisse Group
(Reporting by Soyoung Kim in New York and Swetha Gopinath in Bangalore; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty and John Wallace)