Post War
After he returned to the business in 1945, Sir Eric Bowater focused the business on packaging in the UK, and international expansion. After buying Acme Corrugated Cases Ltd in 1944, Bowater began to organise the companies interests into a series of wholly owned subsidiaries. As a result, by the mid-1950s, Bowater was the largest producer of newsprint in the world.[8] The Company diversified into tissue manufacturing in 1956 forming Bowater-Scott, a joint venture with the Scott Corporation; Scott Corporation bought out the Bowater interest in the joint venture in 1986.[8] Bowater opened a new factory in Gillingham, Kent in the 1960s.[11][12]
By 1962, company assets totalled close to £200 million.[13] Consuming huge amounts of capital, the company had failed to invest in its newsprint production, leaving it with a high cost base which was added to by the opening of Bowater House, a new head office in Knightsbridge.[8] After the death of Sir Eric in 1962, the company began to consolidate. The money-losing European assets were slowly sold off, until the last French plant was sold in the early 1970s. UK and North American newsprint was unwound, with the loss of 300,000 tons of annual production and the closure of the Northfleet mill.[8]
The company demerged its existing United States subsidiary, Bowater Inc., in 1984.[14] However three years later, in 1987, the company acquired Rexham Corporation, a manufacturer of plastic, paper and foil, based in North Carolina.[15]
In 1992, the company acquired Dickinson Robinson Group Packaging.[16] In 1995, the name was changed to Rexam,[17] an abbreviation of the name of one of the Company's subsidiaries, Riegel Paper America, and the business was refocused again – this time into consumer packaging.[9]
In 2005, Rexam disposed of its glass manufacturing businesses to Ardagh Glass Group so as to concentrate on its beverage can production worldwide.[18] It then went on to acquire O–I Plastics, a plastic packaging business in North America, in 2007.[19][20] In June 2011, Rexam agreed to sell its lid-making operations to the U.S.-based Berry Plastics for £222 million (US$360 million).[21][22]
On 13 February 2014, Rexam acquired 51% stake in United Arab Can Manufacturing Ltd for $122 million.[23]
In February 2015, Rexam accepted Ball Corporation's sweetened takeover offer of £4.4 billion ($6.7 billion), a deal which created one of the world's biggest consumer-packaging suppliers.[24] Ball was required to sell eight U.S. aluminum can plants.[25] In June 2016, Rexam was acquired by Ball Corporation for $8.4 billion.[6][7]