Yorkshire Post

S&P raises credit rating on Rio Tinto

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STANDARD & Poor’s on Tuesday raised its credit rating on global miner Rio Tinto for the first time since 2011 on the back of strong financial results and said the global miner could easily fund a big acquisitio­n.

S&P said one of the main factors that led to the upgrade to ‘A’ from ‘A-’ was Rio Tinto’s sharp reduction in debt over the past four years and its “willingnes­s to keep it low”, which would shore it up well against any future downturns.

“Alternativ­ely, it could allow the company to enter into sizable merger and acquisitio­n (M&A) transactio­ns without overstretc­hing its balance sheet,” S&P said.

The upgrade puts Rio Tinto’s long-term credit rating on par with rival BHP Billiton, which was downgraded to ‘A’ in 2016 when iron ore, coal and metals prices stumbled. Rio Tinto’s rating was cut to ‘A-’ in 2011.

The agency said it was unlikely to cut Rio Tinto’s rating in the next two years, adding it would not come under pressure unless iron ore prices fell to $40 a tonne or below for an extended period.

It sees Rio Tinto maintainin­g net debt around $7bn (£5.05bn) to $8bn over the next two years, based on strong cash flow assuming its biggest earner, iron ore, averages $55 a tonne for the rest of 2018 and $50 in 2019.

S&P’s iron ore assumption­s are more bearish than others in the market.

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