The Philippine Star

Global mining deals jump 15% in 2017

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LONDON (Reuters) – The value of global mining and metals deals hit a four-year high in 2017, according to accountanc­y firm EY, as financial distress abated and companies sold off non-core assets. Mining and metals deals totaled $51 billion last year, up 15 percent from 2016 and dominated by coal and steel transactio­ns, although the volume of transactio­ns fell six percent.

“The focus for most of the sector in 2017 was consolidat­ing balance sheet strength and maintainin­g capital discipline,” EY said in a quarterly report on the sector, published on Monday.

Coal transactio­ns surged 156 percent to $8.5 billion as the world’s move to renewables prompted miners to shift away from thermal coal.

One of the biggest coal deals last year was Rio Tinto’s sale of its Coal and Allied mines to Australia’s Yancoal for $2.7 billion.

Steel deals doubled to $13.3 billion, mainly comprising large Chinese mergers and divestment­s in Latin America, while gold transactio­ns fell 34 percent to $7.3 billion.

Money raised by mining companies from stock exchange listings rose to $2.8 billion, the highest in six years but paltry compared to the $17 billion raised in 2011 at the height of the commoditie­s boom.

For the coming year EY expects deals to be fueled by the industry’s return to investment-led strategies aimed at building portfolios rather than divestment-oriented deals that dominated in 2017.

“We expect to see more deals in 2018 as investment-led strategies begin to dominate, but the return of transforma­tional consolidat­ion across the industry is unlikely as capital discipline is maintained,” said EY global mining and metals transactio­ns leader Lee Downham.

Prices of commoditie­s such as copper, zinc, coal and iron ore surged for a second straight year in 2017 on a combinatio­n of dwindling supply and higher demand.

There will be renewed pressure on miners this year to participat­e in battery technology and reduce reliance on fossil fuels, EY said, while the drive to focus on business in lower risk jurisdicti­ons should influence deals in precious metals.

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