Lundin Will Consider Sale Of Whole Company, Or Individual Assets
May 11 2011 - 10:12AM
Dow Jones News
Lundin Mining Corp. (LUN.T) expects to say by the end of May
whether it can reach a deal for the sale of the company as a whole
or for the sale of individual assets.
"We should be in a position ... to give some indication (by the
end of this month) in terms ... of whether a transaction is likely
to arise or not," Chief Executive Phil Wright said on a conference
call Wednesday, following the release late Tuesday of the copper
miner's first-quarter results.
Lundin reported higher year-over-year earnings, but they still
fell short of expectations as sales suffered from shipping
disruptions.
Toronto-based Lundin effectively put itself up for sale at the
end of March after rival copper producer Equinox Minerals Ltd.
(EQN.T) dropped its hostile bid for Lundin after agreeing to be
acquired by Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX), the world's largest gold
producer.
Lundin is open to proposals to either sell the company outright
or to sell off its assets piecemeal. But a sale or break-up of
Lundin is "not a certainty," Wright said Wednesday.
Lundin spent about US$4.8 million in the first quarter to carry
out the strategic process.
The piecemeal sale of Lundin's assets would generate a total tax
hit of between US$100 million to US$110 million, but Wright doesn't
consider that a deterrent to completing a deal.
"You can't regard (the amount) as being a very material item in
the size of the transaction we are talking about," Wright said. He
declined to estimate the value of Lundin or its individual mining
assets. But the company's current market capitalization is about
C$5.18 billion (US$5.41 billion).
The tax hit could be avoided by acquiring Lundin as a whole and
selling unwanted assets, Wright said. Lundin has copper, zinc and
nickel assets in Spain, Portugal, Sweden and Ireland. It also owns
about a 25% stake in the big Tenke Fungurume copper-cobalt mining
project in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Phoenix-based
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX) owns about 58% of
Tenke and the Congolese state mining company, La Generale des
Carrieres et des Mines, owns the rest.
If Lundin chose to sell its stake in Tenke, it would be
obligated to first offer the position to Freeport, which would have
three months to agree to Lundin's proposed sale terms. If Freeport
rejected these terms, Lundin would have six months to complete a
sale at or above the price at which it had offered the stake to
Freeport.
Freeport's right of first refusal doesn't apply if Lundin
chooses to sell the entire company and the buyer then sells
Lundin's Tenke stake.
"We have not formally approached Freeport; we have not put Tenke
up for sale per se," Wright said. "Let's see what happens out of
the (strategic review) process and decide where we go next."
Wright suggested "tier one" companies are looking at Tenke and
in that case it's likely they have already approached Freeport
about a possible transaction.
A Freeport spokesman couldn't immediately be reached for
comment.
Wright also said a group of companies are looking at Lundin's
mining assets in Europe and another group is mulling a possible
acquisition of Lundin as a whole.
On the Toronto Stock Exchange, Lundin is down 1.1% to
C$8.79.
-By Ben Dummett; Dow Jones Newswires; 416-306-2024;
ben.dummett@dowjones.com
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