First Quantum relieves investor worries over $7.9B surprise tax bill from Zambia
Stock rebounds after CEO rejects attempt to capitalize on soaring metal prices
First Quantum Minerals Ltd. chief executive Philip Pascall tried Wednesday to soothe anxious investors about a surprise US$7.9 billion tax bill sent by Zambian authorities this week.
Pascall’s comments appeared to help end the freefall, with the stock closing Wednesday at $18.65, up 3.6 per cent, after sliding 13 per cent on Tuesday.
On a hastily arranged morning conference call, Pascall rejected the US$7.9 billion figure — more than two-thirds of the company’s US$9.5 billion market capitalization. But he declined to describe the worst-case scenario for the Vancouver-based copper producer, which derived 83.5 per cent of its revenue in 2017 from mines in Zambia and is hoping to develop a third mine in the country. The company said its annual tax payments to the country vary, but claimed it pays $200 million in annual royalties.
“We do have cash available to pay what we would expect to pay, if at all,” he said to one question about how First Quantum might finance a payment of even several hundred million dollars to Zambian authorities. The company has US$1.29 billion of cash in hand, according to its latest filing.
The dispute offers another example of the rising tensions between mining companies and governments of cash-strapped countries where they operate, which has been exacerbated as the commodity cycle turns around and metal prices rise. Other countries are also disputing the taxes paid by mining companies, or in some cases rewriting their mining codes to increase their share of the revenue streams.
In one gauge of such tensions, the World Bank’s International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, an arbitration forum, shows 12 disputes have been registered in the oil, mining and gas sector in the past year, a 20-per-cent increase over the previous year.
Not all disputes occur in this forum, and many never reach a public dispute forum at all. Indeed, in the conference call, Pascall said he expects to settle his issue directly with Zambian authorities.
Zambia’s tax bill to First Quantum is likely an opening parry in a negotiating process to obtain greater revenues — “a high-ball first offer,” according to David Manley, an economist with the Natural Resource Governance Institute in London.
“This also feels very much like the Tanzania-Acacia dispute,” he said in an email, referring to a feud that began last summer when the East African nation sent a US$190 billion tax bill to Barrick Gold Corp.-subsidiary Acacia Mining Plc., and which remains unresolved.
“The government accuses a company of a very high, seemingly impossible amount, then a protracted battle across many fronts develops,” Manley said.
First Quantum is the largest copper producer in Zambia, but it also operates mines in Australia, Turkey, Finland and Spain, and has a large project under development in Panama.
Pascall said the US$7.9 billion fee included a US$150 million assessment, US$2.1 billion in penalties and $5.7 billion in interest. He estimated four to six months to review the bill.
In Zambia, which the World Bank estimated had US$21 billion GDP in 2016, the economy often rises or falls with copper prices, according to a paper last November by Manley. Authorities have changed the tax code for mining projects nine times in 15 years to follow the price changes, he wrote.