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Australia is the top destination in mining listings

Australia is the top destination in mining listings

Sources in the industry said that Australia's bourse will see a record number secondary listings from mine developers attracted by the country’s pension wealth, regulations and a jurisdiction that is less exposed to U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade wars.

Industry figures show that the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX), which is based in Sydney, has been gaining market share among its rivals from Toronto and London, despite the fact that the mining and metals sector must expand by $100 billion per year by 2050 to meet the demand for metals to achieve net-zero emission levels.

The overall listing numbers at the exchange are down over the past decade, but the mining sector is still strong.

Sources in banking and law said that a successful listing of Canadian copper miner Capstone by the company last year, which allowed Australian investors to gain exposure to a newly operating copper mine and gave private equity an exit, and also enabled Australian investors to access upcoming index inclusions, sparked new interest.

Sherif Andrawes is the head of global natural resource consultancy BDO and has worked on four recent ASX listings.

He said that the ASX is currently in a better state than Canadian markets, for exploration companies. "There are still more pipelines."

The large pension fund pool in Australia, which is the fourth largest in the world with A$4.1 trillion (2.58 trillion) of assets, and the funds' willingness of holding a substantial portion of their money on Australian listed stocks are two of the main attractions.

Even foreign-domiciled miners who are looking to raise billions to fund new projects find this attractive. Australian pension funds invest more in domestic shares than their competitors, according to JP Morgan, with around 23%, compared to just 4% for Canada and UK.

They're heading for a market that is hungry. The universe of mining shares for managers with resource mandates has been narrowed by buyouts such as BHP's purchase of copper miner Oz Minerals 2023.

Todd Warren, portfolio manager of Tribeca Investment Partners Sydney, said that M&A had created an opportunity for businesses to fill their boards.

According to source estimates and filings, Canadian developer Marimaca Copper will launch a second listing on the ASX in this month, which is the second in a series of at least four planned for this year. The ASX could have as many as 2021, its best year to date.

Nico Cookson, Marimaca's head of corporate growth, said: "We have reached an important stage in our development. We are looking to expand our pool potential investors in order to finance our flagship project to be built in Chile. This is expected to happen in the first half 2026."

The Allure of Stability

Not just secondary listings.

The appetite of Australian investors for mining stocks influenced BHP's decision to cancel its dual London listing by 2022. This move injected A$96 Billion into the ASX, cementing its position as the leading mining exchange.

Rio Tinto, the world's largest iron ore producer, is also under pressure. Robert Friedland, the mining entrepreneur, has announced that his African iron ore firm Ivanhoe Atlantic will list on Australia's bourse.

James Posnett, the ASX head of listing, said that Canadian resource companies are "the most active and engaged we've ever seen".

Anecdotally speaking, the volatility of the market (related geopolitical risk) has led several companies to diversify their share registers outside of North America. He added that Australia was seen as a stable economy with a high level of investor demand.

The ASX has declined to reveal the expected value of listings for this year.

Trends are not one-sided. TSX stated that it encourages dual listings, and noted it had had seven Australian firms list there compared with only two Canadian companies listing in Australia last. FireFly Metals, which is developing a Newfoundland copper-gold project, is included in this list.

The number of ASX-listed companies has decreased by 4% over the next 10 years, up to 2024, says Australia's sharemarket regulator.

"What's happening in mining is an interesting counterpoint to'shrinking ASX narrative'" said Paul Schroder a partner in the law firm King&Wood Mallesons, in Sydney.

(source: Reuters)