Business Day

Sundance shares crash after Hanlong deal fails

- FOREIGN STAFF Sydney

SHARES in Australian iron-ore company Sundance Resources crashed more than 50% yesterday after a billion-dollar takeover agreement with Hanlong Group collapsed.

Sundance terminated the prolonged A$1.3bn ($1.35bn) deal after almost two years of talks when it became apparent that China’s Hanlong Group could not meet funding conditions.

No reason was given for the privately owned company missing a deadline to provide informatio­n on how it would finance the deal, which would have allowed it to acquire all the issued share capital of Sundance. However, Chinese media last week reported that Hanlong chairman Liu Han was being held by police on suspicion of harbouring his brother, who has been arrested for murder.

The website of the Economic Daily newspaper also quoted sources as saying Mr Liu was suspected of laundering money through casinos in Macau, the former Portuguese colony that was handed back to China in 1999.

The bid was also marred by allegation­s of insider trading.

The Africa-focused Sundance said discussion­s were under way with other parties as part of a strategy to develop its Mbalam-Nabeba iron-ore project. “Sundance believes that it continues to receive support from the government­s of Cameroon and Republic of Congo and from China for this project,” Sundance chairman George Jones said.

“The Mbalam-Nabeba project has been globally recognised as an excellent asset, which is financiall­y robust and will unlock a new, worldclass iron-ore region in Africa,” Mr Jones said. “We are confident that we can find a suitable partner to help us bring this project into production.”

Despite the fighting words, Sundance shares slumped when a trading halt was lifted yesterday morning, with the stock trading at less than 10c.

Ahead of the trading halt, shares were worth 21c, having almost halved since December.

Hanlong is a diversifie­d company with interests ranging from tourism to minerals, and assets of more than 20-billion yuan ($3.2bn), according to its website. Sapa-AFP

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