National Post (National Edition)

Nevsun eyes ‘strategic’ alternativ­es to Lundin proposal.

Considerin­g ‘strategic alternativ­es’

- GABRIEL FRIEDMAN

Vancouver-based Nevsun Resources Ltd. on Tuesday urged shareholde­rs to ignore a potential $4.75 cash per share hostile takeover offer from Toronto-based Lundin Mining Corp., signalling how the company may respond when an actual bid materializ­es.

In a press release, Nevsun chief executive Peter Kukielski said “several strategic parties” have expressed interest in participat­ing as it seeks to build its copper-gold mine in Serbia, known as Timok, raising the prospect that his company could sell a stake in the asset, or strike a joint partnershi­p with another company, which would complicate Lundin’s takeover offer.

The proposed deal came back into the news after Lundin Mining on Monday announced it intends to bid about $1.4 billion for Nevsun, at $4.75 per share, and plans to release a formal offer by the end of the month.

In May, Lundin sought to purchase only Timok, and enlisted Euro Sun Mining Inc. to purchase Nevsun’s other main asset, a zinc-copper mine in Eritrea known as Bisha.

But Nevsun rejected the overtures and a formal offer was never put forward. Now Lundin is seeking to buy Nevsun outright, noting changes in Eritrea’s political landscape contribute­d to its change in strategy.

Nevsun jumped nearly 14 per cent in Toronto at $4.78 per share on Tuesday afternoon. Lundin edged 0.5-percent higher to $7.52.

Neither Lundin nor Nevsun would provide comment, and instead issued press releases that contained comments from their respective chief executives.

“This latest announceme­nt from Lundin continues to ignore the fundamenta­l value of Nevsun and its assets,” Nevsun’s Kukielski said in a press release.

He noted that the original plan put forward by Lundin and Euro Sun, which included a mix of cash and shares, valued Nevsun at around $1.5 billion, or $5 per share — higher than the current proposed cash offer by Lundin.

Meanwhile, Kukielski added that in the intervenin­g time, Nevsun updated shareholde­rs on its exploratio­n results in the Timok Lower Zone — a portion of the asset held in joint venture with Freeport-mcmoran Inc. It suggested 31.5 billion pounds of copper and 9.6 million ounces of gold in the deposit, according to an initial inferred resource estimate, which means further exploratio­n is still required.

That happened in late June and prompted CIBC Capital Market analysts Oscar Cabrera and Raphael De Souza to speculate that Lundin would “sweeten” its offer.

On July 4, they predicted Lundin would raise its offer by as much as $785 million to $1.985 billion.

Instead, however, Lundin this week announced a potential cash deal that values the company at $1.4 billion. It represents a 40-per-cent premium to Nevsun’s volume-weighted average share price of $3.35 over the 20 trading days ended April 30, according to Lundin.

Lundin chief executive Paul Connibear also called out the “significan­t recent changes” to the political landscape in Eritrea — last week, it signed a peace agreement to end a decadeslon­g cold war with its neighbour Ethiopia.

“Our offer will represent the clearest path for Lundin Mining to acquire the Timok project and for Nevsun shareholde­rs to realize on the value of their investment without dilution and financing risk,” Connibear said in a press release.

Lundin has not addressed how a pending lawsuit in British Columbia against Nevsun, in which Eritrean former workers say they were forced to toil at its Eritrean mine under threat of torture and physical punishment, affects the company’s valuation.

Connibear only said that he thinks the $1.4-billion offer represents a “significan­t premium to Nevsun’s unaffected share price prior to the announceme­nt of our first proposal” in May.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada