Lithonia Lighting parent agrees to buy Holophane

July 1, 2003
Solidifying its position as the leading player in the highly fragmented $8.2 billion North American lighting equipment market, National Service Industries

Solidifying its position as the leading player in the highly fragmented $8.2 billion North American lighting equipment market, National Service Industries Inc., the parent of Lithonia Lighting, agreed to buy Holophane Corp. for about $450 million, or $38.50 a share.

If the agreement receives antitrust clearance from the federal government, the combination of Holophane and Lithonia Lighting's group of products would create the largest player in the industrial and outdoor lighting market. The addition of Holophane significantly expands Lithonia's international presence, which previously focused on North America for 99% of its sales. Holophane has more than $40 million in non-U.S. sales annually.

With annual revenues of more than $1.1 billion, Lithonia Lighting is already the largest lighting equipment manufacturer in North America. Holophane, with 1998 sales of $215 million, would operate as a separate business unit of Lithonia Lighting and would continue to go to market through its existing factory sales force, according to John Morgan, Lithonia's executive vice president, who will become general manager of Holophane. John DallePezze, Holophane's chairman, president and chief executive officer, will assist in the transition and continue with the company. Lithonia Lighting expects the Holophane management team to remain intact, according to a Lithonia Lighting spokesperson. Lithonia intends to keep Holophane's eight manufacturing plants and 2,000 employees.

National Service Industries said it will begin a cash tender offer for Holophane's outstanding common shares by June 25. The company said it will initially finance the deal, which is subject to antitrust clearance, with short-term debt.

About the Author

Doug Chandler | Senior Staff Writer

Doug has been reporting and writing on the electrical industry for Electrical Wholesaling and Electrical Marketing since 1992 and still finds the industry’s evolution and the characters who inhabit its companies endlessly fascinating. That was true even before e-commerce, LED lighting and distributed generation began to disrupt so many of the electrical industry’s traditional practices.

Doug earned a BA in English Literature from the University of Kansas after spending a few years in KU’s William Allen White School of Journalism, then deciding he absolutely did not want to be a journalist. In the company of his wife, two kids, two dogs and two cats, he spends a lot of time in the garden and the kitchen – growing food, cooking, brewing beer – and helping to run the family coffee shop.

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