Business World

Cost-conscious major miners team up with junior explorers

Copper market faces shortages from 2018 onwards

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Tight budgets and nervous investors have convinced major miners that a cheap, timely way to ensure a strong pipeline of quality assets is to team up with junior, more nimble exploratio­n firms.

LONDON — Tight budgets and nervous investors have convinced major miners that a cheap, timely way to ensure a strong pipeline of quality assets is to team up with junior, more nimble exploratio­n firms.

Miners have slashed costs by delaying projects, sold assets and cut exploratio­n budgets to free up cash to pay down debt, much of it acquired during and after the commodity price supercycle, which started in 2002.

Now, with prices of commoditie­s such as copper and iron ore at multi-year lows, capital expenditur­e is expected to remain subdued and investors reluctant to sanction large acquisitio­ns or projects.

One option is to buy profitable, low- cost so- called “tier 1” good quality mines, but few are up for sale. A viable alternativ­e is to own mines with small explorers.

“Partnering allows us to complement our strengths in big data, technology and research alliances with what juniors can bring… ideas and projects, boots on the ground and acreage,” Stephen McIntosh, Rio Tinto’s head of growth and innovation, said. “It will help all of us to accelerate and enhance the discovery of Tier 1 assets.”

Rio’s 2016 capex budget is $150 million, down 74% from last year, most of that will be aimed at copper.

A favorite with miners and investors, the copper market faces shortages from 2018 onwards.

As a result, copper prices CMC3 are expected to recover

from current levels around $ 4,700, which though up from six and a half year lows of $4,318 in January are far from record highs above $10,000 a ton hit in February 2011.

With that in the background, Rio last year agreed exploratio­n deals with Canada’s Avala Resources on a gold- copper project in Serbia and signed a similar deal with Reservoir Minerals on its Timok Magmatic Complex in Serbia.

Generally under such deals, the larger miners invest capital to pay for mining equipment and the skills needed to develop the

mineral site that is mainly run by the smaller exploring company.

“Investing in juniors allows the majors to spread risk,” said Clive Burstow, fund manager at Baring Asset Management, adding that junior partners often bring local expertise.

BHP Billiton cut its 2016 capital and exploratio­n budget 42% to $6.4 billion. But it has earmarked about $60 million for green field exploratio­n for 2016-2018, BHP geoscienti­st Laura Tyler said in June.

Tyler said BHP sought “projects with junior explorers to derisk projects and secure future options.”

BHP agreed earlier this year to fund copper exploratio­n by Aston Bay Holdings Ltd., which could see it owning a majority stake in the firm.

Aston Bay Chief Executive Benjamin Cox told Reuters his company only bought mineralric­h sites if the deposits were large enough to attract a large mining company to partner with.

“We have a high belief that the partnershi­p model is good. A major mining company will test a bigger set of outcomes than a junior company can afford to test. It fast-tracks the process.” —

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