BHP Billiton Shares Fall to Near-Decade Low
November 13 2015 - 12:10AM
Dow Jones News
MELBOURNE, Australia—Shares of resources giant BHP Billiton Ltd.
fell close to a decade low on Friday as a drop in commodity prices
overnight compounded investor worries about the fallout from a
dam-burst at its jointly-owned Brazilian iron-ore mine operation
last week which killed nine people.
BHP's Sydney-listed shares slipped to levels last seen in late
2005, when China's burgeoning demand for minerals was starting to
raise prices of both commodities and miners' shares.
BHP's shares have slumped 13% since millions of tons of mining
waste burst from a dam at the Samarco operation on Nov. 5, adding
to a recent investor antipathy toward mining stocks as metals
prices have fallen. Mining stocks broadly were hit hard in London
trading on Thursday as crude-oil prices dropped to their lowest
levels since August and prices for copper and other metals fell.
BHP, which produces oil and gas as well as mining copper, iron ore
and other metals, saw its London-listed shares fall 5% on
Thursday.
The company on Friday said mine tailings—a mix of water and
iron-ore waste—now extended 440 kilometers (273 miles) downstream
through remote mountain valleys from the mine site in Brazil's
Minas Gerais state. Local authorities have advised that 637 people
have been evacuated and 11 communities affected. Nineteen people
remain missing.
A day earlier, Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff said the
mine's operator, Samarco Mineraç ã o SA, and owners BHP and local
mining company Vale SA broke federal environmental and other laws.
A statement from BHP on Friday didn't reference Ms. Rousseff's
remarks, but said it and Vale had pledged to establish an emergency
fund for affected communities and rebuilding work.
BHP Chief Executive Andrew Mackenzie flew to the Brazilian mine
this week, where part of a three-tiered dam failed, even as the
death toll continued to rise. Operations at the site have been
halted and Samarco's operating license in the country has been
suspended. Employees are on paid leave and BHP, Vale and Samarco
representatives are meeting with insurers in Brazil, BHP said
Friday.
"Let me be very clear, we are 100% committed to do everything we
can do to support Samarco and make this right," Mr. Mackenzie said
during a media conference while in Brazil.
In early trading Friday, BHP's shares slipped below 20
Australian dollars (US$14.27) a share but recovered modestly after
BHP released an update on the mining accident. If the stock closes
at current levels, it would be its lowest end-of-day level since
early 2005, according to FactSet.
In addition, BHP on Thursday said it had lodged an application
with the Supreme Court in Australia's eastern Queensland disputing
the state government's claim for A$186 million in unpaid royalties
and A$102 million in interest based on an assessment of the
company's calculations for the value of its coal and the use of its
Singapore marketing office between July 2005 and December 2012. BHP
said its coal venture had paid about A$2.4 billion in royalties to
the state during that time.
BHP's shares were recently 1.8% lower at A$20.24 in Sydney.
Other mining stocks were lower, with Rio Tinto Ltd. down 2.1% and
Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. down 3.6%.
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 12, 2015 23:55 ET (04:55 GMT)
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