Sunday Times

Sibanye forks out for choicest scoop of platinum metals

-

SIBANYE Gold agreed to pay more than its market value for Stillwater Mining in a $2.2-billion (about R30.2-billion) deal that would see the South African miner take charge of the world’s highest-grade deposit of platinum-group metals.

Sibanye will pay $18 a share in cash, a 20% premium to the Montana-based miner’s volumeweig­hted average closing share price over the past 20 days, the South Africa-based company said in a statement on Friday. The acquisitio­n exceeds Sibanye’s market value of $1.9-billion.

The producer will fund the purchase through $2.7-billion in loans from Citigroup and HSBC and will pay back $500-million of Stillwater’s convertibl­e debt. The company will also raise at least $750-million in a share sale.

Sibanye CEO Neal Froneman has sought to expand beyond the company’s base of ageing South African gold mines and last year agreed to buy platinum assets from Anglo American Platinum and Aquarius Platinum. The Stillwater purchase is his biggest yet and first outside of South Africa. The Stillwater board has accepted the offer and recommends it to shareholde­rs.

Stillwater’s two mines in Montana are the only platinumgr­oup metals operations in the US and the biggest producer of these outside South Africa and Russia. The mines will produce 535 000 to 545 000 ounces of platinum and palladium in 2016 at a cash cost of $430 to $455 an ounce. Platinum dropped 0.2% to $936.32 an ounce at 6.20am on Friday in London.

“The transactio­n represents a unique opportunit­y for Sibanye to acquire high-quality, low-cost PGM assets which offer nearterm organic growth,” Froneman said in the statement.

The purchase will underpin the “strategy of paying sustainabl­e, industry-leading dividends”.

Sibanye shares more than tripled in 2016 to a record-high R72.48 on August 5, with Froneman saying earlier this year he would consider using the high stock price to make acquisitio­ns. Since then, the stock has tumbled 65.26% to R24.01. — Bloomberg OPPORTUNIT­Y: Sibanye CEO Neal Froneman

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa