Toronto Star

Newmont Mining to buy Goldcorp in $10-billion takeover

New mining giant, with Canadian presence, will go head to head against Barrick Gold

- IAN BICKIS

Newmont Mining Corp. has struck a $10-billion (U.S.) deal to take over Goldcorp Inc. in a move that will see the U.S.-based mining giant grow even larger while Canada’s mining industry loses a head office.

Colorado-based Newmont will add Vancouver-based Goldcorp’s seven mines in North and South America to its global operations of 12 operating mines to create a company expected to rival or top Barrick Gold as the world’s largest gold producer.

“This is not a deal we have to do, this is a deal that we want to do,” Newmont CEO Gary Goldberg told a conference call Monday.

The deal follows Barrick Gold’s $6.1billion (U.S.) all-stock takeover of Randgold Resources Ltd. that closed at the start of the year to create a company with a combined 2018 gold production guidance of between 5.8 million and 6.3 million ounces.

Newmont Goldcorp, as the new company will be called, said it will target annual production between six and seven million ounces after selling off more

than a billion dollars worth of assets in the next two years. Goldcorp said Monday it produced 2.3 million ounces last year, while Newmont has forecasted between 4.9 million and 5.2 million ounces for 2018.

The combined company, to be owned 65 per cent by current Newmont shareholde­rs and 35 per cent by Goldcorp shareholde­rs, will continue to have a significan­t presence in Vancouver as the designated base of operations for North America.

“The formation of Newmont Goldcorp ensures that Canada will continue to be a pillar of an industry-leading gold company,” Goldcorp CEO David Garofalo said.

He noted the Vancouver office will manage more ounces of gold production and oversee a workforce of more than 10,000, as well as Indigenous commu- nity relations and renewed exploratio­n.

“Newmont Goldcorp will also provide prospects for new investment in a reinvigora­ted exploratio­n program in Canada ... with the largest pipeline of feasibilit­y and developmen­t-stage assets in the Canadian gold business,” Garofalo said.

The emphasis on a sustained Canadian presence comes after Barrick Gold has been criticized for a hollowing-out of its Canadian footprint following the deal with London-listed Randgold.

Barrick shifted its province of registrati­on to British Columbia to take advantage of less stringent requiremen­ts for director residency and now has a slimmed-down Canadian presence on both its board and in management.

Its head office in Toronto is also losing about 100 staff, which will number about 70 by April as it shifts towards a decentrali­zed management model.

Desjardins analyst Josh Wolfson said the deal looks like an answer to some of Goldcorp’s problems.

“We see the transactio­n positively for Goldcorp, resolving short-term Goldcorp guidance risk as well as critical strategic and capital allocation questions,” he said in a research note.

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