Sunday, July 28, 2013

China Molybdenum to Pay $820 Million for Rio Mine in Australia to Add Copper

China Molybdenum to Pay $820 Million for Rio Mine to Add Copper

China Molybdenum Co., the nation’s second-biggest producer of the steelmaking material, agreed to pay $820 million for Rio Tinto Group’s Northparkes mine in Australia to add copper production.
Bloomberg

China Molybdenum to Pay $820 Million for Rio Copper Mine

China Molybdenum Co. (3993), the nation’s second-biggest producer of the steelmaking material, agreed to pay $820 million to Rio (RIO) Tinto Group’s Northparkes mine to gain its first overseas copper asset.
The sale should be completed by the end of the year, Rio said today in a statement. London-based Rio owns 80 percent of the mine with the balance held by Sumitomo Metal Mining Co. and Sumitomo Corp. (8053), which have the right to match the offer.
Buying the stake gives China Molybdenum control of a mine in New South Wales that provided 43,100 metric tons of mined copper for Rio in 2012 as well as a specialist underground training center. The purchase ranks as the third-largest by a Chinese company of a mining asset announced this year as the number and value of the nation’s deals in the sector slides from last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
“The acquisition is part of China Moly’s diversification to boost profit as molybdenum has been weak over the past few years in line with China’s sluggish steel market,” said Kevin Guo, a Shenzhen-based analyst with Guotai Junan Securities Co.. “Production of copper enjoys a higher premium than other base metals such as zinc and lead.”
Rio gained 0.2 percent to A$57.35 at 2:02 p.m. in Sydney trading. The stock has dropped 13 percent this year. China Molybdenum halted its shares today pending an announcement on a transaction.
The deal is subject to “customary” regulatory approvals, Rio said according to the statement. The mine, which began operation in 1994, is valued at about $800 million, Citigroup Inc. said in a February report.

Deals Decline

Before today, Chinese companies had announced 67 mining deals this year worth a total of $7.1 billion, down from 269 in 2012 worth $27.7 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. China Molybdenum last bought assets in 2008, when it paid HK$350 million ($45 million) for three gold mines in China, according to the data.
The “board is optimistic on copper and gold,” China Molybdenum Chairman Wu Wenjun said in a phone interview. “Although they’re a small part in our operations, they’re part of our development strategy both in China and overseas.”
Copper, used in electrical wiring and tubes, is expected to gain until at least 2015, according to analyst forecasts compiled by Bloomberg, as aging ore bodies and few large new discoveries keep the metal’s supply and demand balance tight.
The Northparkes operation “is a good performer on any measure except scale” while the asset had “significant expansion potential,” Adrian Wood, a Sydney-based analyst with Macquarie Group Ltd., said in a report.

Insufficient Size

Rio may reap $10.4 billion from asset sales, Deutsche Bank AG estimated in March, as the company joins global rivals in selling assets after falling commodity prices crimped revenue. The company considered selling Northparkes, which is in New South Wales state, in 2009, and held onto it after copper and gold prices rose, Rio said in December that year.
“Northparkes is a successful business but is not of sufficient size to be a good fit with our strategy,” Chief Financial Officer Chris Lynch said in the statement. “The agreed sale of Northparkes follows our recently completed divestment of the Eagle nickel project in the United States.”
Copper for delivery in three months, the London Metal Exchange’s benchmark, has dropped 13 percent this year to $6,862 a ton on July 26, entering a bear market in April.
To contact the reporter on this story: Elisabeth Behrmann in Sydney at ebehrmann1@bloomberg.net
end quote from:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-07-28/china-molybdenum-to-pay-820-million-for-rio-mine-to-add-copper.html?cmpid=yhoo

I think China is trying to monopolize metals in general worldwide in addition to Solar panels. So, it is a very obvious Economic war it is having with the whole world. I hope it stays an economic war and never turns into a hot war or a worse cold war than we already have going with China, Russia and Iran at present. Although China is a very interesting Case with about 300 to 400 million people at a level of Europe, the U.S. and Canada and other countries with the additional 1 billion or more Chinese barely surviving if at all. How will China keep all it's people happy during their present economic downturn? That might be the million dollar question right there.

Hitler solved this kind of problem with starving Germans by redirecting the anger of the starving masses at Jewish people. However, in the end we all know how horrifically that turned out. Hopefully, China with 5000 years of culture behind it will figure out a better way. Otherwise, China being the unwieldy amount of people it has always been might blow apart like the old Soviet Union did. We shall see.

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