Business Day

Who will replace CEO Glasenberg?

Its more than another corporate transition at the top commodity trader

- Jack Farchy London

Contenders for the biggest job in commodity trading, the head of Glencore, will be on parade this week. Outgoing CEO Ivan Glasenberg wants his successor to look “like me”, and the main aspirants do.

Contenders for the biggest job in commodity trading, the head of Glencore, will be on parade this week. Outgoing CEO Ivan Glasenberg wants his successor to look “like me”, and the main aspirants do.

Glasenberg announced his plan to retire in the next few years in December 2018, firing the starting gun on a closely watched race. The three most likely choices are Gary Nagle, Kenny Ives and Nico Paraskevas. They are barely known outside Glencore, however, and as the global metals industry descends on London for London Metal Exchange (LME) Week, miners, traders and investors will be jostling to find out more.

The passage of the CEO’s baton at Glencore is more than another corporate transition. The firm is the world’s largest commodity trader, dominating transactio­ns in most industrial metals, including copper, zinc and aluminium. The CEO of the Swiss-based, London-listed company has had an outsized role in shaping the world of commodity trading since Glencore was founded by Marc Rich in 1974. Glasenberg, 62, who has been in charge since 2002, has not announced the candidates to succeed him.

But he has said that there are “three to four guys” on the shortlist; that the next CEO should be from a younger generation; and that “I hope he looks like me”. No women are in the running.

While three candidates top the list, nothing is final, according to a person familiar with the matter, who declined to be identified discussing a confidenti­al issue.

Two of the executives have early career paths that broadly mirror Glasenberg’s, having trained in SA as accountant­s. Unlike the CEO’s generation of senior traders, many of whom became billionair­es in the company’s 2011 flotation, none has a large equity stake in the company.

The succession will depend in part on how and when Glasenberg leaves.

Glencore’s dealings in Nigeria, Venezuela and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) are under investigat­ion in the US, and that has triggered speculatio­n the CEO may step aside sooner than he has envisaged. If that happens, one of the older hands might take the reins — for example Peter Freyberg, recently elevated to oversee the company’s industrial operations, or Tony Hayward, the former BP CEO who is currently Glencore’s nonexecuti­ve chair.

The lead contenders are: ● Gary Nagle

If looking like Glasenberg is a job requiremen­t, Nagle may be the man — some who know him call him a “mini-Ivan”.

He is a South African, like his boss, and similarly has degrees in commerce and accounting from the University of Witwatersr­and. Also like Glasenberg, he built his career by rising through the ranks of Glencore’s coal department.

Nagle, 44, is also the most asset-focused of the likely successors. That could be an advantage as mining accounts for an increasing share of Glencore’s income and as the company moves away from its roots as a pure trader.

Nagle joined Glencore in 2000 as an asset manager in the coal department, going on to become CEO of its Colombian coal operation, Prodeco, in December 2007.

After the acquisitio­n of Xstrata, he was moved to run the company’s SA-focused alloy assets and was named head of coal assets in 2018.

● Kenny Ives Glencore’s head of nickel since 2012 is probably the candidate best known outside the company’s headquarte­rs in Baar, Switzerlan­d.

Gregarious and well liked in the metals industry, he has a traditiona­l trader’s regard for personal connection­s.

In an interview with a student at a Swiss university, he said: “When I got involved in this business back in the 1990s, I remember my boss at the time saying to me, ‘Kenny, this business is about three things: relationsh­ips, relationsh­ips and relationsh­ips.’ It’s true.”

Ives grew up in Brighton, southern England, where he paid his school fees “in cash out of an old Tesco carrier bag”, according to an interview with an alumni website. He joined Glencore in 1998, straight out of university. For the first decade he traded copper concentrat­es, spending a year in China.

In the Glencore mould, he is a sports enthusiast who captained his school soccer team and regularly leads morning or lunchtime runs.

Ives’s time at Glencore has not been without missteps. According to several current and former colleagues, he clashed with the then bosses of the copper, lead and zinc department, Telis Mistakidis and Daniel Mate, leading to his transfer to the grain division in 2008, from where he moved to nickel.

● Nico Paraskevas

A Greek citizen who spent much of his career in Africa, Paraskevas is, like Glasenberg, a chartered accountant and a graduate of the University of Witwatersr­and. He also spent time in the coal department, working for Glencore’s SA unit, Shanduka, from 2007 to 2009.

Paraskevas moved to the DRC as finance director and then commercial director of Glencore’s copper unit there, later becoming CFO of Katanga Mining, based in Johannesbu­rg.

In 2018, Katanga was fined by the Ontario Securities Commission for misstating its accounts. Most of the conduct that was censured occurred after Paraskevas left as CFO in

November 2012. The company did acknowledg­e, however, that it “failed to maintain adequate internal controls” from January 1 2012 until March 31 2017, a period that overlapped slightly with Paraskevas’s tenure.

He has not been accused of any wrongdoing.

He led the disposal of Las Bambas, the Peruvian copper project that Glencore sold as part of a deal to get Chinese antitrust approval for the Xstrata acquisitio­n. The timing of that deal was sweet for Glencore: it was consummate­d just before the copper market plunged.

Still, Paraskevas remained relatively unknown to the wider world when he was elevated to run Glencore’s powerful copper trading division in 2018.

Colleagues say he is a calmer and a less dominating personalit­y than his predecesso­r and fellow Greek national, Telis Mistakidis. He has overseen a less aggressive trading strategy by Glencore in the LME copper market.

Paraskevas also has taken a more direct role in the trading of cobalt, a byproduct of Glencore’s DRC copper mines. Cobalt rapidly became one of the group’s highest-profile commoditie­s.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Ivan the accountant: Ivan Glasenberg, the CEO of Glencore, has had an outsized role in shaping commodity trading.
/Reuters Ivan the accountant: Ivan Glasenberg, the CEO of Glencore, has had an outsized role in shaping commodity trading.

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