3rd UPDATE: Yanzhou, Gloucester In Talks To Create A$8 Billion Coal Miner-Sources
December 20 2011 - 1:17AM
Dow Jones News
China's Yanzhou Coal Mining Co. (YZC) is in initial talks with
Gloucester Coal Ltd. (GCL.AU) to merge their Australian coal assets
and create a miner worth up to 8 billion Australian dollars (US$7.9
billion), three people familiar with the matter said Tuesday.
The move is a bold step by China's third largest coal miner by
output to secure a listing on Australia's main exchange and meet
undertakings given to the Australian government in 2009 to seal a
A$3.5 billion takeover of Felix Resources Ltd. It also gives it
access to producing coal mines, boosting its production growth
profile at a time when output at its mines in China's Shandong
province are stagnating.
Analysts said the proposed deal is unlikely to encounter
opposition from Australia's foreign investment watchdog, despite
previous big investments by state-backed Chinese companies
triggering criticism from some politicians.
Gloucester is worth A$1.44 billion (US$1.42 billion) based on
Monday's closing share price, and its 1.8 million metric tons of
coal production represents less than 1% of Australia's total 406
million tons output in the year to June 30.
"I don't think Gloucester is a big enough a producer for the
Foreign Investment Review Board to knock any potential deal back,
if they approved the Felix takeover you think they'd easily allow
Gloucester to be absorbed into the entity," Royal Bank of Scotland
analyst Tom Sartor told The Wall Street Journal.
In a statement to the Australian Securities Exchange,
Sydney-based Gloucester said it had requested trading in its shares
be halted until Thursday, by when it expects to make an
announcement in connection with a "possible change of control
transaction."
Gloucester, which operates two open-pit mines and holds
exploration licenses, said it wasn't yet in a position to make such
an announcement.
Yanzhou's board secretary and deputy general manager, Zhang
Baocai, last week said the company was considering a reverse
takeover to fulfil a commitment to Australian regulators that it
will float at least 30% of its Australian assets, known as Yancoal
Australia, by the end of next year.
Gloucester and Noble Group (N21.SG), Gloucester's majority
shareholder with a 64.5% stake, declined to comment on a possible
deal.
UBS and Citi are advising Yanzhou, and Lazard is advising
Gloucester.
Demand for Australian coal has intensified in recent years as
companies seek sources of the commodity both for fuel and a key
steelmaking ingredient to feed China, India and other rapidly
industrializing countries.
In a recent wave of consolidation, Rio Tinto PLC (RIO) and
partner Mitsubishi Corp. (8058.TO) bought the remaining shares they
didn't hold in Coal & Allied Industries Ltd. in a deal that
valued the target at A$10.8 billion. Among other deals, U.S. coal
miner Peabody Energy Corp. (BTU) in November gained control of
Macarthur Coal Ltd. with a A$4.9 billion bid, and Whitehaven Coal
Ltd. (WHC.AU) this month agreed to buy smaller Aston Resources Ltd.
(AZT.AU) for almost A$2.3 billion.
E.L. & C. Baillieu analyst Adrian Prendergast said the
potential merger was very positive.
"Since the Felix takeover in 2009, I think Yancoal has been
sizing up all of the potential fits for them as a way of backing in
the assets and listing," he told The Wall Street Journal. "From the
product point of view, it gives it substantial scale and really
broadens their market ability in terms of coal type."
Prendergast said the combined entities of Yancoal-Gloucester, as
well as Whitehaven-Aston, would both be attractive targets for
global players. However, Chinese companies have little track record
of selling out of assets that they control.
Yanzhou shares were placed in trading halt on the Hong Kong
Stock Exchange pending the release of an announcement which is
price sensitive in nature and on the Shanghai Stock Exchange due to
a proposed transaction.
-By Gillian Tan, The Wall Street Journal;
gillian.tan@wsj.com
--Robb M. Stewart of Dow Jones Newswires in Melbourne
contributed to this article.
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