Cape Times

South32 abandons bid for colliery, stake in terminal in Oz

- Sandile Mchunu

SOUTH32 has ditched its plan for a possible takeover of Peabody Energy’s Metropolit­an Colliery and its minority stake in the Port Kembla coal export terminal after Australian lawmakers raised some concerns.

Initially South32 had agreed to pay at least $200 million (R2.67 billion) for the assets last year, but “Australian regulators raised concerns about the sale weakening competitio­n among coal suppliers to domestic steelmaker­s”, South32 said in a statement.

South32 said it was not prepared to make significan­t concession­s in favour of Australian steel makers that would likely be required to mitigate the competitio­n issues.

South32 said to do so would be contrary to the global market in which metallurgi­cal coal producers compete and would adversely affect the value propositio­n of the acquisitio­n.

Concession­s South32 chief executive Graham Kerr said: “Our approach to acquisitio­ns is always opportunis­tic and seen through the lens of creating value for our shareholde­rs. To proceed with the acquisitio­n, in light of the anticipate­d concession­s, would have compromise­d the merits of the transactio­n and this is not something we are prepared to do.”

South32, the coal and metals miner spun out of BHP Billiton in 2015, agreed in November to buy Peabody’s Metropolit­an Colliery and an associated 17 percent stake in the Port Kembla Coal Terminal, south of Sydney.

The deal would have been its first merger and acquisitio­n activity success after being beaten by China Molybdenum for Anglo American’s $1bn niobium and phosphate business in Brazil last year.

Metropolit­an, 10km east of South32’s Appin Colliery, has the capacity to generate 2.3 million tons of coal a year.

The failed deal comes just as coal prices are surging amid weather-related disruption­s in Australia and just two weeks after St Louis-based Peabody emerged from bankruptcy and re-listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

South32 closed 3.4 percent down at R27.86 on the JSE.

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Graham Kerr, chief executive of South32, said they were not prepared to compromise merits of the deal.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Graham Kerr, chief executive of South32, said they were not prepared to compromise merits of the deal.

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