National Post

Barrick in bid talks with First Quantum investors

- THOMAS BIESHEUVEL, DINESH NAIR AND ALFRED CANG Bloomberg With assistance from Jacob Lorinc

Barrick Gold Corp. has spoken with some of First Quantum Minerals Ltd.’s major investors to gauge their support for a potential takeover, after the sudden closure of its flagship mine left the Canadian copper producer reeling and wiped out more than half its market value.

Barrick chief executive Mark Bristow approached some of First Quantum’s largest investors late last year, according to people familiar with the situation, who asked not to be identified as the talks were private. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear if Barrick has made a fresh approach to First Quantum, and there’s no guarantee it will make a formal offer.

Gold giant Barrick has been seeking to expand in copper, and a deal with First Quantum would transform the company into one of the world’s biggest producers. The smaller Canadian miner has been left vulnerable after Panama ordered the closure of its biggest and most profitable asset, creating a potential opportunit­y for Bristow — an industry veteran with a history of building and running mines in challengin­g locations.

Bristow has been closely monitoring the situation since First Quantum’s problems escalated in October, one of the people said. The CEO has said he is confident that Barrick could resolve the situation in Panama as well as run First Quantum’s African mines, the people said. First Quantum’s biggest shareholde­r is the Capital Group with 22 per cent, according to data compiled by

Bloomberg. China’s Jiangxi Copper Co. owns 18 per cent, and is among those that have been approached by Barrick, the people said.

Spokespeop­le for Barrick didn’t respond to requests for comment.

First Quantum declined to comment, while Jiangxi didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment outside of regular office hours.

First Quantum has long been on the radar as a potential target for the world’s biggest miners, in large part because the company’s Cobre Panama mine is one of the newest and biggest copper operations. The industry’s key players are all seeking to expand production of the metal that is essential to decarboniz­ing the global economy.

Yet the Panama project has also proved to be the company’s biggest vulnerabil­ity.

Cobre Panama became the focus of widespread protests after the government approved a new multidecad­e operating contract, and the company was forced to stop production because it couldn’t access supplies. Panama’s Supreme Court subsequent­ly ruled that the law governing the operating licence was invalid, prompting President Laurentino Cortizo to order that the mine be closed.

First Quantum’s share price collapsed as a result of the turmoil, shedding more than 60 per cent of its value last year. The company is currently worth about US$6.8 billion, while Barrick is worth about US$30 billion.

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