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Rio drops chase for US$5bil lithium miner stake

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MELBOURNE: Rio Tinto Group has dropped out of the bidding for a stake in Soc Quimica & Minera de Chile SA, one of the world’s top lithium producers, as it pursues other ways to capitalise on the electric-car boom, people familiar with the matter said.

Rio decided not to proceed with an offer for Nutrien Ltd’s 32% stake in Santiago-based SQM after studying informatio­n in a data room, according to the people. Other strategic bidders remain interested in the holding, one of the people said, asking not to be identified because the informatio­n is private. Nutrien’s interest in SQM is worth about US$5bil at current market prices.

Nutrien, the Canadian firm formed through Potash Corp of Saskatchew­an Inc’s recent merger with Agrium Inc, is selling the holding to meet a condition imposed by Indian regulators when approving that combinatio­n. Rio last year sought advice from firms including Credit Suisse Group AG on a possible bid for the stake, people familiar with the matter said in November.

Lithium is a key element used in electric-vehicle batteries, and prices have tripled since 2015. BHP Billiton Ltd, the world’s largest mining company, in September approved a US$43mil project to start producing nickel sulfate, a product needed for lithium-ion batteries. Glencore Plc plans to double its production of cobalt in the next two years, another key battery component.

Representa­tives for Rio Tinto, Nutrien and SQM declined to comment.

Rio closed little changed at A$79.25 in Sydney trading yesterday, as rival BHP Billiton Ltd fell along with Australia’s benchmark index. Lithium producers including Galaxy Resources Ltd also declined.

A decision to walk away from a possible SQM deal is likely to be welcomed by investors concerned over the prospect of hasty acquisitio­ns, according to Peter O’Connor, a Sydney-based analyst with Shaw and Partners Ltd. It’s better that “Rio is keeping the powder dry,” he said in an e-mail.

London-based Rio is “well placed to benefit from the growth of EVs with our copper and aluminium offering,” though is continuing to evaluate other opportunit­ies, chief executive officer Jean-Sebastien Jacques told investors at a Sydney forum last month. The company is studying developmen­t of a Serbian lithium project that could meet 10% of global demand and begin production as soon as 2023.

Rio’s Ventures unit, led by former Xstrata Plc dealmaker Andrew Latham, is also reviewing investment­s and partnershi­ps in commoditie­s that are outside Rio’s core portfolio and exposed to green technology. Nutrien CEO Jochen Tilk told analysts in October that the company had seen “significan­t interest” for its SQM stake as investors seek exposure to lithium assets amid expectatio­ns of a boom in electric vehicles.

Mining companies need to remain wary of buying assets at over-inflated prices as they seek to tap forecast rising demand for battery raw materials, Evy Hambro, who manages BlackRock Inc.’s World Mining Fund, said in a September interview. Investors are urging the biggest miners not to repeat past mistakes on failed acquisitio­ns, and major deals to add lithium would risk eroding trust as the commodity is likely at the top of its price cycle, Sanford C. Bernstein Ltd wrote in a report.

While Nutrien is the biggest shareholde­r in SQM, Chilean businessma­n Julio Ponce controls the company via voting shares held through a series of holding companies. Ponce, who is engaged in a bitter contractua­l dispute with Chilean authoritie­s who are pushing him to relinquish control, last month agreed to certain conditions in order to restart talks on SQM’s main mining license in the Atacama salt flat. — Bloomberg

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