Daily Mail

Glencore sets aside £1billion to settle corruption probes

- By Francesca Washtell

GLENCORE has set aside £1.1bn to settle corruption and bribery investigat­ions as it clocked up record profits.

The mining and commoditie­s trading titan said it is likely to resolve probes in the UK, US and Brazil this year – and expects heavy fines.

Chief executive Gary Nagle is keen to draw a line under the cases as he tries to clean up its reputation and fend off an attack from activist investor Bluebell Capital Partners. ‘We are changing the culture,’ he said.

The comments came as Glencore reported a 43pc rise in revenues to £151bn last year after commodity prices spiralled as the world bounced back from Covid.

The FTSE 100 group made around £16bn in profits, up from £8.6bn the previous year, and said it would hand £3bn to investors through share buybacks and dividends. The Swiss firm also announced more money for the UK electric car battery firm Britishvol­t, which is building a factory in Northumber­land.

Already an investor, Glencore has ploughed another £40m into the latest funding round, which raised £200m.

Glencore shares rose 1.2pc, or 4.9p, to 427p – the highest it has traded at since 2012. Its stock has risen by more than a third since Nagle took over last year from Ivan Glasenberg, who took Glencore public in 2011.

Nagle said he was ‘not happy’ with setting aside £1.1bn, even though it was a fraction of turnover. He said: ‘We recognised there has been misconduct in this company historical­ly.

‘We have worked very hard to correct that. We are changing the culture. We want to complete these investigat­ions, put a line under that and move forward.’

The US Department of Justice began an investigat­ion in 2018 into suspected corruption in Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Venezuela.

In the UK, the Serious Fraud Office launched its probe in 2019, while cases were also brought by prosecutor­s in Brazil, Switzerlan­d and the Netherland­s – as well as another US case from the country’s commoditie­s regulator into market manipulati­on.

Some of the cases have questioned Glencore’s links with Israeli billionair­e Dan Gertler, who had close ties with former Congolese leader Joseph Kabila and was said to be the unofficial gatekeeper of natural resources deals there. Glencore employs around 135,000 people worldwide at around 150 sites.

It already mines battery metals including copper, nickel and cobalt – but it wants to refocus on ‘commoditie­s of the future’ to hit net zero targets worldwide.

Nagle and his team are reviewing 27 assets, 14 of which are being sold.

Activist shareholde­r Bluebell Capital has said Glencore’s plan to keep thermal coal in its portfolio until 2050 was ‘morally unacceptab­le and financiall­y flawed’.

Glencore’s strategy is to run down its coal business over three decades and this has been backed by its biggest shareholde­rs.

On Monday, Bluebell suggested it spin off its coal arm into a separate company – though Nagle rejected the calls.

SP Angel analysts said: ‘Glencore is well placed to continue to benefit from strong demand for industrial metals and trading in raw materials.

‘High prices for oil, nickel, copper and coal are likely to continue to drive earnings higher.’

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