2nd UPDATE: Energy Metals Gets A$83.6 Million Bid For 70% Of Co
September 07 2009 - 11:48PM
Dow Jones News
Uranium explorer Energy Metals Ltd. (EME.AU) said Tuesday it has
received an A$83.6 million cash offer for 70% of the company from a
unit of state-owned China Guangdong Nuclear Power Holding Co., or
CGNPC.
The offer signals China's first significant corporate move into
one of the world's biggest uranium producing nations and comes amid
a wave of Chinese investment in Australia's natural resources.
Also on Tuesday, China Railways Materials Commercial Corp.
proposed to take substantial stakes of around 12% in two Australian
iron ore juniors United Minerals Ltd. and FerrAus Ltd.
China already has an indirect investment in Australia's uranium
sector through Aluminium Corp. of China's 9.3% shareholding in
Anglo-Australian diversified mining giant Rio Tinto Ltd.
And in 2006, the former Conservative government allowed China's
Sinosteel to take a 60% stake in a uranium project to be supplied
by local miner PepinNini Minerals Ltd. The joint venture is still
targeting production from a project in South Australia state in
2011.
Perth-based Energy Metals has a portfolio of eight undeveloped
uranium properties covering 4,000 square kilometers in Australia's
Northern Territory and Western Australia state.
CGNPC is offering Energy Metals A$1.02 a share cash, an 18.6%
premium to its latest price of 86 cents before the shares were
halted from trade on Aug. 27.
China Uranium has also agreed to underwrite an A$11.7 million
1-for-9 rights issue at 90 cents a share. It will end up with 73%
of the company if no other shareholders participate.
The offer is subject to the approval of shareholders, the
Australian Foreign Investment Review Board and Chinese
regulators.
In a sign local investors are confident the deal will be
finalized, Energy Metals shares surged 14% Tuesday to 98 cents,
despite the A$1.02 offer only accounting for 70% of the company and
the potential dilutionary impact of the equity raising.
The share price surge could also show that some investors
believe a rival bid could emerge for the group.
The offer comes amid a low point in relations between China and
Australia following the detainment last month of four Rio Tinto
employees, including Australian citizen Stern Hu, on charges of
bribery and infringing on state secrets.
It also comes as disquiet grows among some politicians and
commentators about the amount of Chinese investment in Australia's
mining sector.
FIRB currently has a lot on its plate with the regulator mulling
a proposed A$3.54 billion acquisition of coal miner Felix Resources
Ltd. by China's Yanzhou Coal Mining Co.
It's also considering a controversial A$252 million investment
by a Chinese company in Lynas Corp. that would strengthen China's
hold on the world's supply of rare-earth minerals.
The proposed Energy Metals deal is substantially smaller than
others being considered by FIRB, so it's unlikely to attract the
same level of regulatory scrutiny. It also involves a small portion
of Australia's uranium resource.
According to a May 9 report by the World Nuclear Association,
Australia's uranium reserves are the world's largest with 23% of
the total, followed by Kazakhstan, Russia and South Africa.
Chinese interest in Energy Metals is of little surprise as the
fast-growing nation strives to increase its use of cleaner-burning
fuels.
China is considering doubling its target for nuclear power
generation by 2020 to 86 gigawatts, from the current goal of 40 GW,
according to state media. China has 11 nuclear reactors operating
now, representing 9.1 GW of installed capacity, and another two
dozen under construction or planned.
The vast majority of this construction is being carried out by
CGNPC and national rival China National Nuclear Corp.
CGNPC has four nuclear power plants in operation in China with a
generating capacity of 4 gigawatts, and is planning to hike this
beyond 20 GW within the next decade.
However, China's known uranium reserves are insufficient to meet
this expansion. China currently produces around 840 metric tons per
year of yellowcake, which meets about half its current needs,
according to the World Nuclear Association.
Tuesday's move by CGNPC signals that China is intensifying its
drive to lock up uranium resources via takeover offers for listed
companies, rather than government-to-government deals as in the
past.
China National Nuclear Corp. Vice President Qin Jiangang told
Dow Jones Newswires in April that the company was talking to
Australian uranium suppliers but needed to verify the feasibility
of certain projects before making any more details public.
PepinNini and another small uranium play, Alliance Resources Ltd.,
confirmed they'd recently talked to Chinese interests.
Australia's resources minister Martin Ferguson said on a visit
to Beijing earlier this year that Australia should expand uranium
production and increase exports to China. Importantly, Ferguson
also indicated the government's openness to Chinese investment in
the Australian uranium sector.
An official from CGNPC unit China Uranium Development Co., which
is making the offer for Energy Metals, declined to comment.
The China Railways Materials deals require Australian government
approval.
-Ross Kelly, Dow Jones Newswires; 61-2-8235-2957;
ross.kelly@dowjones.com
(David Winning contributed to this article)
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