Zambian Business Times

U.S SEC Charge KCM's Parent Vedanta Resources Former Chief with Fraud On the $3.7 billion Coal Deal in Mozambique

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Tom Albanese, the former Chief Executive Officer - CEO of Vedanta Resources, the Parent company of Zambia's Konkola Copper Mines - KCM and his then Chief Financial Officer - CFO Guy Elliot at the time he served as Rio Tinto CEO have been charged with fraud by the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

Albanese, who was asked to resign from Rio Tinto on 17 January 2013 and went on to head Vedanta Resources, were he has also recently stepped down in August 2017. Albanese had said that he was retiring from Vedanta, the London listed company controlled by Indian metals magnet, Anil Agarwal. Vedanta replaced Albanese with an interim CEO Kuldip Kaura from September 1, 2017.

The SEC issued a statement in Washington D.C on 17th October, 2017 which stated that the trio was charged with fraud for inflating the value of coal assets acquired for $3.7 billion and sold a few years later for $50million.

The SEC complaint, which was filed in federal court in Manhattan, alleges that Rio Tinto, its former CEO Thomas Albanese, and its former CFO Guy Elliott failed to follow accounting standards and company policies to accurately value and record its assets.

Instead, as the project began to suffer one setback after another resulting in the rapid decline of the value of the coal assets, they sought to hide or delay disclosure of the nature and extent of the adverse developmen­ts from Rio Tinto’s Board of Directors, Audit Committee, independen­t auditors, and investors.

“As alleged in our complaint, Rio Tinto’s top executives allegedly breached their disclosure obligation­s and corporate duties by hiding from their board, auditor, and investors the crucial fact that a multi-billion dollar transactio­n was a failure,” said Stephanie Avakian, Co-Director of the SEC’s Enforcemen­t Division.

“Rio Tinto and its top executives allegedly failed to come clean about an unsuccessf­ul deal that was made under their watch. They tried to save their own careers at the expense of investors by hiding the truth,” Steven Peikin further stated.

Based on the complaint’s allegation­s, Rio Tinto plc, Rio Tinto Limited, Albanese, and Elliott are charged with violating the anti-fraud, reporting, books and records and internal controls provisions of the federal securities laws.

The SEC seeks permanent injunction­s, return of allegedly ill-gotten gains plus interest, and civil penalties from all the defendants, and seeks to bar Albanese and Elliott from serving as public company officers or directors.

According to the SEC’s records of the filed complaint, in 2011, Rio Tinto acquired coal assets in Mozambique shortly after disclosing huge losses associated with its previous large-scale acquisitio­n of Alcan. Both acquisitio­ns took place under Albanese’s leadership.

The second acquisitio­n was also unsuccessf­ul as it was based on the incorrect assumption that Rio Tinto could inexpensiv­ely mine, transport, and sell large quantities of high-quality coal, chiefly using barges for shipping.

The SEC’s complaint alleges that the project suffered setbacks almost immediatel­y, as Rio Tinto, Albanese, and Elliott learned that there was less coal and of lower quality than expected, and that Mozambique had rejected its barge applicatio­n. The complaint alleges that the drop in quantity and quality of coal, coupled with the lack of infrastruc­ture to transport it, significan­tly eroded the value of the acquisitio­n.

The complaint alleges that after already impairing Alcan twice, Rio Tinto, Albanese, and Elliott knew that publicly disclosing its second failure and rapidly declining value would call into question their ability to pursue the core of Rio Tinto’s business model to identify and develop long-term, low-cost, and highly-profitable mining assets.

Instead, they concealed the adverse developmen­ts, allowing Rio Tinto to release misleading financial statements days before a series of U.S. debt offerings.

Rio Tinto raised $5.5 billion from U.S. investors, approximat­ely $3 billion of which was raised after May 2012, when executives at Rio Tinto Coal Mozambique had already told Albanese and Elliott that the subsidiary was likely worth negative $680 million.

The complaint alleges Albanese then repeated and reinforced the false positive outlook for the project in public statements.

The alleged fraud continued until January 2013, when an executive in Rio Tinto’s Technology & Innovation Group discovered that the coal assets were being carried at an inflated value on Rio Tinto’s financial statements.

After an internal review allegedly triggered by the executive’s report to Rio Tinto’s Chairman, Rio Tinto announced that Albanese had resigned and the company reduced the value of the coal assets by more than $3 billion, or more than 80 percent. Rio Tinto sold the Mozambique subsidiary for $50 million.

 ??  ?? Tom Albanese former Vedanta CEO
Tom Albanese former Vedanta CEO

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