Scottish Daily Mail

Glencore chiefs failed to reveal £4m payouts

- by Rachel Millard

STAFF at a controvers­ial mining company failed to disclose more than £4m in payments handed to them by parent company Glencore.

Finance chief Jacques Lubbe, former chief executive Jeff Best and nine other members of the top team at Katanga Mining shared bumper share bonuses from Glen core between 2011 and 2016.

But the payments were not published as they should have been.

Lubbe, and three other board members who had not received undisclose­d payments, resigned yesterday as Canada-listed Katanga was rocked by revelation­s of major accounting problems. It is also being investigat­ed by financial authoritie­s.

Billionair­e Telis Mistakidis, head of Glencore’s copper division, and fellow board members Liam Gal- lagher and Tim Henderson stepped down after Katanga found it had overstated copper stock by more than 7,916 tons.

Canadian authoritie­s are investigat­ing whether Katanga filed misleading financial statements and are also probing corporate governance, directors’ behaviour, and disclosure of risk under bribery laws.

It is the latest scandal to beset Glencore. Last week there were calls for UK authoritie­s to investigat­e £34m loaned by Glencore to Israeli billionair­e Dan Gertler, who helped negotiate mining rights for Katanga.

The Wall Street Journal reported in July that the Ontario Securities Commission is already looking into £75m in payments from Katanga to Gertler’s company. Katanga says i ts major copper and cobalt mines in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, one of the world’s poorest and most corrupt countries, have the potential to become the world’s largest producers of cobalt. Demand for cobalt is set to soar due to its use in electric cars.

Glencore yesterday nominated Steven Kalmin, currently Glencore’s chief finance officer, as well as other Glencore bosses Mike Ciricillo and Tony Moser, to Katanga’s board to improve financial controls.

Katanga started investigat­ing itself earlier this year amid the Canadian authoritie­s’ probe. The results of its review published yesterday revealed accounting practices that incorrectl­y recorded total copper cathode production, the value of copper concentrat­e and ore, and amounts of property plant and equipment. The newly disclosed extra pay involved a potential £600,000 worth of shares to Johnny Blizzard, chief executive of Katanga since February 2015, including £377,000 in 2014.

His predecesso­r Best had around £1.2 min undisclose­d share payments. Lubbe was awarded £180,000 in a long-term incentive plan in 2014.

Katanga said the payments should have been disclosed. YO! Sushi has bought Canadian food chain Bento Sushi in a deal worth £59m as the British-based firm bids to push in to North America.

YO! Sushi’s partnershi­p with Bento, North America’s second-largest sushi brand, will make it one of the biggest sushi firms outside of Japan, with the two groups having racked up sales of around £175m over the last 12 months.

YO! Sushi has seen a boom as British diners opt for its menu of rice and fish for a healthier alternativ­e to the traditiona­l sandwich.

Robin Rowland, chief executive, said the deal takes YO! ‘into the next stage of its developmen­t’.

Known for its Japanese ‘kaiten’ bar that delivers food on a conveyor belt, YO! Sushi opened its first US restaurant last year in Massachuse­tts, before opening in Manhattan in March. Bento was founded in Toronto in 1996 by Ken Valvur and operates from over 600 locations.

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