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LONDON — BHP Group on Wednesday said it believes an extension to talks with takeover target Anglo American is necessary, as the deadline for discussions looms later in the session. The offer values the company at £38.6 billion ($49.2 billion), according to previous Reuters calculations. "BHP believes a further extension of the Deadline is required to allow for further engagement on its proposal," it said in a statement. The rival miners have until 5 p.m. London time Wednesday to reach an agreement following a week-long extension of last week's deadline. Anglo rejected BHP's previous offers, saying they undervalued the company and its prospects.
Persons: BHP, Stuart Chambers Organizations: LONDON, BHP Group, London, CNBC, BHP Locations: American
Top commodity trader Pierre Andurand expects copper to reach $40,000 a ton in the next four years. AdvertisementCopper prices at records are only a taste of what's to come, says top commodities trader Pierre Andurand. Copper is already sitting near record highs, so any quadrupling from current levels would mean a prolonged series of fresh records. It's bad news for a depleting inventory; last year, global copper supply hit its lowest seasonal level since 2008. The supply-demand imbalance is the same thesis for why commodities expert Jeff Currie expects higher prices, though his projection is nowhere near Andurand's — Currie expects copper to hit $15,000 in the coming years, and has called it "the most compelling trade" he's ever seen.
Persons: Pierre Andurand, , That's, Andurand, BHP's, Jeff Currie, — Currie, I'm, Currie Organizations: Service, Financial Times, Bloomberg
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMorningstar: Anglo American has been good at playing 'hard to get'Jon Mills, equity analyst at Morningstar, says BHP's last bid for Anglo American is "getting expensive" ahead of Wednesday's deadline for a formal offer.
Persons: Jon Mills, BHP's Organizations: Morningstar
(Photo by William WEST / AFP) (Photo by WILLIAM WEST/AFP via Getty Images)LONDON — Anglo American rejected a third takeover proposal from rival BHP Group on Wednesday, as the companies agreed to extend talks deadline by one week. The British miner confirmed the third proposal from BHP offered about £29.34 per Anglo American share, based on undisturbed share prices as of market close on April 23. Shares of Anglo American were up 0.35% shortly after the announcement, while BHP shares fell over 3.4%. The combined companies would form a behemoth in copper mining and the world's largest player in the space, supplying 10% of global output, according to a Reuters analysis. Anglo rejected both previous offers, however, saying that they "significantly undervalue the company and its future prospects."
Persons: Stuart Chambers, Chambers, Duncan Wanblad Organizations: BHP, William WEST, WILLIAM WEST, Getty, BHP Group, London Stock Exchange, Limited, Iron Ore Limited, Rio Tinto Locations: Melbourne, Australian, AFP, American, London, Australia
Diamond rings are displayed in a cabinet inside a De Beers SA store in Hong Kong, China, on Thursday, Sept. 14, 2017. Photographer: Calvin Sit/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesAnglo American plans to spin off its highly prized De Beers diamond unit as part of a sweeping restructuring of its 107-year-old business as it seeks to fend off persistent takeover bids from mining rival BHP Group . The British miner said in a statement Tuesday that De Beers could be divested or demerged to "improve strategic flexibility." CEO Duncan Wanblad said the restructure, which represents "the most radical changes to Anglo American in decades," would help streamline the business and provide greater value to shareholders. The announcement comes just a day after Anglo rejected an improved takeover proposal from BHP.
Persons: Bruce Cleaver, Calvin Sit, De Beers, Duncan Wanblad, Wanblad, Organizations: De Beers SA, Bloomberg, Getty, BHP Group, BHP Locations: Hong Kong, China, London
BHP says Anglo American rejected $42.7 billion revised proposal
  + stars: | 2024-05-13 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Sheets of copper cathode are pictured at BHP Billiton's Escondida, the world's biggest copper mine, in Antofagasta, northern Chile March 31, 2008. BHP Group said on Monday that Anglo American had rejected a revised buyout offer valuing the company at 34 billion pounds ($42.67 billion). Anglo American in April rebuffed BHP's $39 billion all-share takeover proposal, saying it was opportunistic and significantly undervalued its prospects. "BHP is disappointed that the Anglo American Board has chosen not to engage with BHP with respect to the Revised Proposal and the improved terms," it said in a statement. "BHP continues to believe that a combination of the two businesses would deliver significant value for all shareholders," it added.
Persons: BHP's, BHP Organizations: BHP Billiton's Escondida, BHP Group, Anglo American, BHP Locations: Antofagasta, Chile
Elliott Management has built a roughly $1 billion stake in miner Anglo American in recent months, a person familiar with the matter told CNBC. Anglo American shares were up 5% on the news Thursday. News of the activist's position comes as the $43 billion, London-based miner faces takeover interest from BHP, a mining giant with worldwide operations. Anglo rejected BHP's $39 billion takeover offer Friday morning, saying BHP's offer "significantly undervalues Anglo American and its future prospects." Anglo American declined to comment.
Persons: Elliott, Stuart Chambers, BHP, CNBC's Karen Gilchrist Organizations: Elliott Management, CNBC, BHP, Bloomberg Locations: London, Australia
Australia-based BHP on Thursday said it had made an all-share takeover offer which valued the smaller company at £31.1 billion ($38.9 billion). "The BHP proposal is opportunistic and fails to value Anglo American's prospects, while significantly diluting the relative value upside participation of Anglo American's shareholders relative to BHP's shareholders," he said. Anglo American Chairman Stuart Chambers said the proposed restructure was "highly unattractive, creating substantial uncertainty and execution risk borne almost entirely by Anglo American, its shareholders and its other stakeholders." Shares of Anglo American Platinum rose more than 2% on the announcement, while Kumba Iron Ore moved 0.9% lower. Chambers said that, in its current state, Anglo American was "well positioned" to benefit from that energy transition.
Persons: BHP's, Stuart Chambers, Chambers, — CNBC's Jenni Reid Organizations: BHP Group, BHP, CNBC, Limited, Iron Ore Limited Locations: Australia, London, American, South Africa
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCopper is 'crown jewel' for BHP Group's bid for Anglo American, says portfolio managerTodd Warren, portfolio manager at Tribeca Investment Partners, says copper is the "crown jewel" and the main priority that BHP Group is fighting for with its takeover offer for rival Anglo American.
Persons: Todd Warren Organizations: BHP Group's, Tribeca Investment Partners, BHP Group
BHP half-year profit beats expectations, inflation impact recedes
  + stars: | 2024-02-20 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
In this photo illustration, BHP logo of a multinational mining, metals and petroleum company is seen displayed on a smartphone in front of BHP Billiton logo. BHP Group on Tuesday logged first-half underlying profit that slightly beat analyst expectations, buoyed by strong iron ore prices, and said inflationary impacts were receding. BHP said underlying profit attributable to shareholders was $6.60 billion for the six months ended Dec. 31, unchanged from the previous year, but topping an LSEG estimate of $6.42 billion. It declared an interim dividend of $0.72 per share, compared with $0.90 per share a year earlier. Shares in BHP edged down 0.3% to A$45.91 amid a sour tone in resources stocks.
Persons: BHP Organizations: BHP Billiton, BHP Group, BHP, Citi Locations: China, India
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Australia's resources minister has begun a week long trip to South Korea and Japan to discuss gas exports and critical minerals opportunities, as its government on Monday released a "prospectus" of 52 investment ready critical minerals projects. "Australia's critical minerals are key to the world's energy transformation," said Minister Madeleine King in a statement. King will be meeting Japan's trade minister Ken Saito, and South Korean trade and energy minister Duk-geun Ahn, she said in a statement. The minister is also expected to engage her counterparts on natural gas as Australia develops its future gas policy, given both nations are large customers of the major exporter. Already this year, a string of Australian nickel projects have been iced, including part of BHP's operations in the state of Western Australia.
Persons: Madeleine King, King, Ken Saito, geun Ahn, Melanie Burton, Christopher Cushing Organizations: MELBOURNE Locations: South Korea, Japan, Korean, Australia, Western Australia, Australian
BHP's iron ore operations include four processing hubs and five mines that are linked by more than 1,000 km (621 miles) of rail and port facilities. BHP said that the proposed action would present logistical challenges but that it had put in place arrangements to mitigate the impact. Worries about a strike had lent support to iron ore prices, which are trading at the highest levels since February. "Concerns over disruptions on the supply side due to the looming strike at BHP in Australia contributed to higher iron ore prices today," said Pei Hao, a Shanghai-based analyst at international brokerage FIS. Drivers received an offer from BHP last Wednesday that did not meet their expectations around rostering, arbitration and camp standards, Busson added.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Greg Busson, Busson, Pei Hao, BHP, Melanie Burton, Amy Lv, Gerry Doyle Organizations: BHP, REUTERS, Rights MELBOURNE, Reuters, Monday, Mining, Energy Union WA, Drivers, Thomson Locations: WA, Australia, Shanghai, rostering, Rio Tinto's, Beijing
[1/2] The BP logo is seen on gasoline pumps at a BP gas station in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., November 24, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsLONDON, Sept 29 (Reuters) - BP's (BP.L) top executive in the United States, Dave Lawler, is leaving the company, the energy company said on Friday in a memo to employees, less than three weeks after the company's chief executive, Bernard Looney, resigned. He is the younger brother of Doug Lawler, chief executive of Continental Resources, another large U.S. shale oil and gas producer. BPX operations in Texas and Louisiana last year produced an average of 325,000 barrels of oil and gas per day. Alvarez, who joined the company in 1996, will continue in his role as senior vice president gas and power trading, Americas.
Persons: Andrew Kelly, Dave Lawler, Bernard Looney, Helge Lund, Lawler, Doug Lawler, Orlando Alvarez, Alvarez, Kyle Koontz, Ron Bousso, Juby Babu, Shilpi Majumdar, Daniel Wallis, Leslie Adler Organizations: REUTERS, BP, Energy, Continental Resources, Reuters, BP America, BPX Energy, Thomson Locations: Manhattan , New York City, U.S, United States, Gulf of Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, BP America, Americas, London, Bengaluru
"In the near term, while the outlook for the developed world is uncertain, we expect China and India to remain relative sources of stability for commodity demand," BHP said. "We anticipate that these competing forces may have a variable impact on commodity prices in the period." But perhaps more concerning is that China and India, the two major sources of commodity demand in Asia, are at best stable in their demand outlooks, and even then BHP qualified this with the word "relative." When it comes to China, BHP acknowledged the current struggles Beijing is having in re-igniting growth in the world's second-biggest economy and top commodity importer. BHP is more confident about India, stating that an investment upswing is happening in the world's most populated country, and commodity demand has been "robust."
Persons: BHP, Clyde Russell, Stephen Coates Organizations: BHP Group, BHP, Reuters, Thomson Locations: LAUNCESTON, Australia, China, India, Asia, Beijing, CHINA
"The main issue with methanol at this stage is increasing access and the scale of green production," Peter Lye, global head of shipping at Anglo American, said. Reuters GraphicsNetherlands-based OCI, which supplied green methanol to Maersk's first ship, can produce up to 200,000 tpy of the renewable fuel. Bashir Lebada, CEO of OCI's methanol and fuels business, said the vessel orders have given suppliers a confidence boost in advancing their green methanol projects even though production is "very small" now. Most green methanol projects are located in China, northern Europe and North America - far from major bunker hubs Singapore and the United Arab Emirates, creating a logistical gap. Within Asia, South Korea and China are set to increase their capacity to fuel ships with green methanol.
Persons: A.P . Moller, Moller, Emma Mazhari, Rashpal Singh Bhatti, we're, Peter Lye, Greg Dolan, Bashir Lebada, Anita Gajadhar, Jeslyn Lerh, Jacob Gronholt, Johannes Birkebaek, Florence Tan, Barbara Lewis Organizations: Reuters, Maersk, Handout, REUTERS, Container, A.P, CMA, Apple, Nike, Adidas, Walmart, Global, Reuters Graphics, United Arab, Pedersen, Thomson Locations: SINGAPORE, COPENHAGEN, South Korea, Reuters Graphics Netherlands, China, Europe, North America, Singapore, United Arab Emirates, Chile, Argentina, Asia, Copenhagen
BHP posts record full-year iron ore output, flags rising costs
  + stars: | 2023-07-20 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
BHP Group's logo adorning the side of its global headquarters in Melbourne on February 21, 2023. BHP Group on Thursday reported its highest ever annual iron ore production, helped by the continued ramp up at its South Flank operations in Western Australia but flagged it faces rising costs. BHP's iron ore production in Western Australia was aided by improved rail performance at the mines, but production was partially hit by unfavorable impacts from tropical Cyclone Ilsa in the quarter. It said iron ore production from Western Australia, on a 100% basis, was 72.7 million tonnes (Mt) in the three months to June 30, a touch lower than Visible Alpha estimates of 73 Mt, according to UBS. The company expects fiscal 2024 output for Western Australia iron ore between 282 million and 294 million metric tons, the mid-point of which is 0.9% higher than annual production of 285.3 million metric tons for fiscal 2023.
Organizations: BHP, BHP Group, UBS, Western Locations: Melbourne, Western Australia
What BHP is touting is a process it calls credible and cost-effective, and it's these aims that are worth examining. BHP is the world's biggest miner of coking coal, used to make steel, and ranks third in iron ore, the main steel raw material. Diesel accounts for 76% of the emissions at the iron ore operations in Western Australia state, and 45% at the BHP Mitsubishi Alliance coking coal mines in the northeastern state of Queensland. BHP plans to switch its diesel trucks to battery-powered vehicles, but this will take some time and also involves more than just buying new equipment. The overall message from BHP is that it is advancing plans to reduce its Scope 1 and 2 emissions.
Persons: Clarence Fernandez Organizations: BHP Group, BHP, BHP Mitsubishi, Reuters, Thomson Locations: LAUNCESTON, Australia, Western Australia, Queensland
BHP Group's logo adorning the side of its global headquarters in Melbourne on February 21, 2023. Australia's critical minerals strategy does not need the sugar hit of more subsidies as good projects will find investment, but the country needs to hasten mine development timeframes and rework new workplace legislation, BHP's CEO said on Tuesday. BHP CEO Mike Henry's comments came a week after Australia, one of the world's biggest suppliers of raw minerals, outlined a strategy on how it will work with investors and international partners to build a critical minerals processing industry. Australia needs to do that." The government needs to address the overlap between state and national regulation as well as speed up permitting, he said.
Persons: Mike Henry's, Henry Organizations: BHP Locations: Melbourne, Australia, Brisbane, U.S
Australian court approves BHP's $6.4 bln OZ Minerals takeover
  + stars: | 2023-04-17 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: 1 min
April 17 (Reuters) - Global miner BHP Group Ltd (BHP.AX) said on Monday the Federal Court of Australia had approved its A$9.6 billion ($6.44 billion) takeover of OZ Minerals Ltd (OZL.AX). The court approval follows overwhelming support from OZ Minerals shareholders for the deal, which is the third largest in global mining in recent months. Shares of the Australian copper producer will be suspended from trading on the local bourse at the close of trading on Tuesday. ($1 = 1.4914 Australian dollars)Reporting by Echha Jain in Bengaluru; Editing by Rashmi AichOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Some 78.9% of proxy votes on behalf of Oz Minerals' investors were in favour of the takeover offer of A$26.50 cash from BHP and a A$1.75 special dividend paid to Oz Minerals investors, at a shareholder meeting in Adelaide on Thursday. It will bring in Oz Minerals' Carapateena copper mine, close to BHP's own Olympic Dam copper mine and smelting operations in South Australia. Strategically it will also boost BHP's nickel supply through Oz Minerals' West Musgrave nickel project in Western Australia, where BHP is already producing nickel sulphate at its Nickel West operations. If the deal is approved as expected, Oz Minerals shares will be suspended on April 18. Oz Minerals' board had unanimously supported the bid.
BHP's exploration accelerator to open to uranium, lithium finds
  + stars: | 2023-04-05 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
SINGAPORE, April 5 (Reuters) - BHP Group's (BHP.AX) programme to support promising minerals explorers will expand beyond copper and nickel to prospective uranium and lithium projects from September, the head of its Xplor program said on Wednesday. For its second year, the programme wants to receive double the number of applications at 500 from the first year as it opens up to more commodities, said Sonia Scarselli, vice president of BHP Xplor. "We will be looking not just at copper and nickel, but at uranium and lithium and so on," Scarselli told a commodities conference in Singapore. Scarselli told Reuters last month BHP saw lithium's demand-supply equation as not as fundamentally stretched as that for copper and nickel. The miner, which produces uranium as a byproduct at its Olympic Dam copper operations in South Australia, has become more vocal about the role of uranium in a new energy world.
BHP Group seeks delay to Brazil dam court case
  + stars: | 2023-03-29 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes/File PhotoLONDON, March 29 (Reuters) - Mining group BHP Group (BHP.AX) is seeking to delay a potential 36 billion pound ($44 billion) London lawsuit over Brazil's worst environmental disaster as it needs more time to prepare, the company's lawyers said on Wednesday. BHP denies liability and in December applied to join Vale to the case. Simon Salzedo, representing Vale, argued that BHP has no case against Vale and that, if it did, any lawsuit should be brought in Brazil. Reparation and compensation programs implemented by the Renova Foundation funded $6 billion in financial aid by the end of 2022, BHP added. BHP has applied to the Supreme Court to end the case without trial following the Court of Appeal's decision last year.
As a result, the world's largest listed miner reported underlying profit attributable from continuing operations of $6.6 billion, down from $9.72 billion a year earlier. That missed a Vuma Financial estimate of $6.82 billion, as earnings from copper and coal came in lower than analysts had expected. Shares of the global miner fell as much as 2.8% to A$47.11, their lowest since Jan. 6 and were down 2% at 0138 GMT in a broader market (.AXJO) that was down 0.5%. BHP also said it expected aggressive global interest rate hikes from last year to slow growth sharply across the developed world. BHP has threatened not to invest in Queensland after the state hiked its coal royalties to the highest rate in the world.
SINGAPORE, Feb 21 (Reuters) - Chinese utilities and traders have stepped up purchases of Australian coal in February, encouraged by signs of further policy relaxation after trade partially resumed last month following a two-year hiatus. At least 15 vessels hauling about 1.4 million tonnes of February-loading Australian coal are bound for China, according to shiptracking data from Refinitiv and Kpler. Reuters GraphicsAnother more than 1 million tonnes of thermal coal have been booked to load in March, a senior trader with a state-run Chinese utility said. "In theory, firms who acquire the licence would be able to get their cargoes through customs," said another Chinese utility official. Chinese buyers may also face competition in Australian coal purchases as producers have pivoted their sales to other markets in China's absence.
BENGALURU/MELBOURNE, Feb 14 (Reuters) - Australia's iron ore giants BHP Group, Rio Tinto and Fortescue are set to report a steep drop in their earnings, which is set to compress their payouts to shareholders, after China's COVID lockdown drove down iron ore prices. Average realised prices for iron ore fell sharply in the six months to December, hitting earnings. First-half net profit at Fortescue, reporting on Feb. 15, is seen declining to $2.34 billion from $2.78 billion. Underlying half-year profit at Rio Tinto, which reports on a calendar year cycle, is seen declining 48% to $4.77 billion from $9.21 billion. Rio will report on Feb. 22.
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