UPDATE: Equinox Minerals Announces C$4.8 Billion Takeover For Lundin Mining Corp
February 28 2011 - 1:51AM
Dow Jones News
Equinox Minerals Ltd. (EQN.AU) said Monday it will offer 4.8
billion Canadian dollars (US$4.9 billion) in cash and shares to
take over Lundin Mining Corp. (LUN.T) in a hostile bid that could
derail Lundin's planned C$9 billion merger with Inmet Mining Corp.
(IMN.T).
Equinox, which produces around 110,000 tons a year of copper
concentrates from its Lumwana mine in the southern African country
of Zambia, said that the offer represented a 26% premium to the
closing price of Lundin's shares in Toronto on Friday.
"It's pretty simple: we're a 26% premium, the merger is a zero
premium," Craig Williams, Equinox Chief Executive, told Dow Jones
Newswires. "Together this company will have one of the best
profiles in the copper business."
He said that the takeover could raise the copper production of
the combined group to 500,000 metric tons a year by 2016, enough to
overtake the current production of major miners of the commodity
including Antofagasta PLC (ANTO.LN) and Teck Resources Ltd.
(TCK).
Driven by record-breaking copper prices, Equinox has been on the
hunt for acquisitions in recent months. Last month the company
completed a A$1.25 billion offer for Citadel Resource Group Ltd., a
copper-gold developer focused on projects in Saudi Arabia.
However, Williams said that lead and zinc mines in Europe that
currently make up the bulk of Lundin's reserve base were of little
interest, signalling a possible sale of the assets.
"Our priority is very much copper and we will remain a pure
copper play," he said. "That's our focus and that will remain so.
We are getting some zinc assets but that isn't a high priority for
us."
The company said that Lundin shareholders could either take
C$8.10 in cash for each of their own shares, or 1.2903 Equinox
shares and US$0.01 in cash.
Cash for the deal would be financed through a US$3.2 billion
bridge facility from Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse, and the
company said cash flow from the combined operations would allow it
to return to net cash within four years.
Three-month copper futures on the London Metal Exchange hit an
all-time record of US$10,190/ton on Feb. 15 before slipping to
US$9,790/ton at their last trade. Prices have risen by more than a
third over the past 12 months on fears that demand for the
commodity, which is used in a range of household manufactured goods
from electronic circuitry to plumbing pipes, could be outstripping
supplies.
Zinc, by contrast, is up only 13.7%, and warehouses have around
200 days' worth of supply amidst slack demand.
Lundin's main copper asset is a 24.75% shares in the Tenke
Fungurume mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo's southern
Katanga province, across the border from Equinox's Lumwana
mine.
The mine is majority-owned by the world's largest independent
copper miner, Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX), with
Congo's state mining company Gecamines holding a smaller stake.
Williams said there would be no direct synergies between the two
sites, but added that there were similarities in the geology and
exploration opportunities between the sites.
-By David Fickling, Dow Jones Newswires; +61 2 8272 4689;
david.fickling@dowjones.com
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