Sun.Star Davao

Management shakeup looms in SMI

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DON’T look now but a major management shakeup could take place in Sagittariu­s Mines Inc. (SMI) once the long anticipate­d merger between the world’s fourth largest copper producer and one of the world’s biggest commoditie­s firms is completed within the year.

Although the expected March 15 merger deadline between Xstrata Plc and commoditie­s giant Glencore has been put on hold until further announceme­nt from both parties, leadership row in the merged company has already claimed the scalp of Xstrata CEO Mick Davis who will be replaced as its top guy by Glencore chief Ivan Glasenberg.

In a report from the Financial Times, Davis rued that the deal is reportedly already “a takeover and no longer a merger “that’s the reality of it.”

The statement came after a US$ 200 million pay package for the retention of Xstrata executives was thumbed down by investors from both camps.

Glencore and Xstrata are still hammering out details of the merger that has been delayed for over a year now.

The US$ 90 billion deal will position the merged company in the Top 4 mining firms in the world.

Financial analysts said the merger will eventually push through this year as the deal is often described as a behemoth deal “too big to fail.”

The multi-billion big ticket deal could also affect the ownership and management of SMI, owner of the world-class Tampakan Copper and Gold Project.

Xstrata Copper, a subsidiary of Xstrata Plc, controls 62.5 per cent of SMI.

The rest of the SMI stake is owned by Australia-based exploratio­n company Indophil Resources NL.

Indophil Resources, in turn, has minority Filipino shareholde­rs that count among them PLDT’s Man- ny Pangilinan, San Miguel Corporatio­n, SM’s Henry Sy and the Alcantaras.

A highly-placed source who requested anonymity as he is not authorized to issue any statement said a revamp in the management of SMI could also follow once the GlencoreXs­trata merger deal is completed.

SMI is locked in a legal tussle with the South Cotabato provincial government which, in 2010, passed an ordinance banning open pit mining.

The mining company has already postponed its commercial production target from 2016 to 2019 due to its failure to secure government permits. But it was recently issued an environmen­tal compliance certificat­e by the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources.

The Swiss-based Glencore will be the fifth foreign company to join the Tampakan project.

The original Financial Technical Assistance Agreement was originally owned by Western Mining Corporatio­n in 1995 before its rights were sold to New Zeland-based MIM Holdings. MIM holdings was later joined by Indophil Resources NL (Australia) in the Tampakan Mineral Resources Corporatio­n that eventually became SMI.

In 2007, Xstrata Copper, which financed the exploratio­n activities of SMI, exercised its options and acquired the shares of MIM which made it the controllin­g company of SMI.

Xstrata has since kept control over SMI management and operations.

 ?? (COCOY SEXCION/SARANGANI INFORMATIO­N OFFICE) ?? ATTY. Cynthia Perez-Alabanza, spokespers­on and adviser for external affairs of the National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s (NGCP), explains to the media that power demand in Mindanao has caught up with supply resulting to brownouts. Perez-Alabanza...
(COCOY SEXCION/SARANGANI INFORMATIO­N OFFICE) ATTY. Cynthia Perez-Alabanza, spokespers­on and adviser for external affairs of the National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s (NGCP), explains to the media that power demand in Mindanao has caught up with supply resulting to brownouts. Perez-Alabanza...

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