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Refined copper bundles at a BHP mine in South Australia. Photo: sonali paul/ReutersMining companies are back at the deals table as they battle for control of commodities essential for making electric cars and renewable-energy infrastructure. The world’s largest miner is set to seal its biggest deal in more than a decade. An American gold giant is seeking to acquire an Australian rival that is rich in copper. And a Swiss commodities company has made two proposals to combine with a century-old Canadian competitor.
Uncertainty about HSBC’s strategy for serving in both China and the West is amplified by disagreements with Ping An. LONDON—For nearly a year, HSBC Holdings PLC has openly come under pressure from its top shareholder, Ping An Insurance Co., in a standoff that pits Europe’s largest bank against China’s largest insurance company. The source of the rift dates back years, interviews with people familiar with the matter, including people familiar with developments at both companies, suggest.
Prateek Gupta is the 43-year-old scion of an Indian family that ran a public metals-and-power company. Even before Trafigura Group said phony nickel shipments could cost it up to $577 million, some people and businesses had decided to steer clear of both Prateek Gupta—the businessman Trafigura says is responsible for the alleged misconduct—and a Swiss firm Mr. Gupta had acquired. Commodity-trading giant Trafigura has accused Mr. Gupta and related companies of committing “systematic fraud.” It says it agreed to buy nickel—a hot commodity, due to the electric-vehicle boom—but instead received other, cheaper cargoes.
Hipgnosis owns the rights to songs written by artists such as Shakira, Lindsey Buckingham and the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Investors are demanding a change of tune at Hipgnosis Songs Fund Ltd., the London-listed investment vehicle that owns the rights to tens of thousands of songs written by artists such as Shakira, Lindsey Buckingham and the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Hipgnosis was founded by Merck Mercuriadis , a former pop-star manager who has called catalog copyrights recession-proof, and better than investing in oil or gold. Hit songs can yield decades of payments for their owners, as they are streamed, played on the radio, performed live or featured in advertisements.
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