The Gold Coast Bulletin

Lowball offer for lithium

Wesfarmers bid ‘undervalue­s’ Kidman Resources

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WESFARMERS’ bid for Kidman Resources undervalue­s the lithium miner, analysts say, reflecting the financing difficulti­es the sector faces even as electric car makers warn of raw material shortages.

Wesfarmers offered a 47 per cent premium for Kidman, which is developing the Mount Holland project in Western Australia through a joint venture with battery chemicals maker Sociedad Quimica y Minera de Chile S.A. (SQM). But even that offer, which valued the company at $776 million, or $1.90 a share, undervalue­d the company, said analysts at J.P. Morgan and Canaccord Genuity.

Prospects for lithium demand look strong over the next decade as government­s worldwide set ambitious targets to increase sales of electric vehicles (pictured). In May 2018, Kidman signed a lithium supply agreement with electric carmaker Tesla, which this week forecast a shortage of key electric vehicle minerals occurring in the future.

JP Morgan said that Wesfarmers’ share price bid “fundamenta­lly undervalue­s” Kidman’s share of the joint venture, adding that Mount Holland is a “Tier-1” project. Canaccord said the bid “falls short” of their valuation of $2.15 a share for Kidman.

Both companies say there is the potential for a third party to place a higher bid.

“The chance of an interloper seeing greater value in Kidman, either joint venture partner SQM or an outside party, is real,” said JPMorgan.

Part of the reason for the lower valuation stems from problems the lithium mining sector has faced in gaining financing for projects. The Mount Holland site reportedly will require about $600 million in capital. SQM has pledged $100 million to the project.

Miners have struggled with financing as retail equity markets do not provide the scale of funding they need and banks have been reluctant since it is not easy to hedge their lithium price risk.

“It’s next to impossible to hedge so therefore project financing becomes really difficult,” said Aaron Ross, global head of resources at ANZ at an industry event in Melbourne.

Large auto and battery makers could seek equity stakes in companies instead of signing supply off-take agreements, as Chinese companies have done, said Mr Ross. Diversifie­d miners that have started to accumulate cash could also step in, with Rio Tinto, South 32 and Fortescue all looking to get into lithium, said Reg Spencer, mining analyst at Canaccord, with Rio Tinto best placed.

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