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Barrick Mining, a Canadian company, is exploring the possibility of IPO for its North American assets

Barrick Mining, a Canadian company, is exploring the possibility of IPO for its North American assets
Barrick Mining, a Canadian company, is exploring the possibility of IPO for its North American assets

Barrick Mining announced on Monday that it is exploring the possibility of an initial public offering for a subsidiary which would hold its North American assets in gold amid a record rise in gold prices.

The U.S. listed shares of the Canadian mining company rose by nearly 4% during premarket trading.

Barrick would be reversing its 2019 merger with Randgold Resources. Investors are also pressing the miner to take advantage of the historic rise in gold prices in order to boost profits, while selling off riskier assets such as those in Africa, Papa New Guinea, and Pakistan's Reko Diq.

The gold price has reached record highs in this year due to expectations of lower rates and the rising appeal of gold as a safe haven asset.

Sources told us that in November Barrick considered splitting into entities focused on Africa and North America.

The new entity is heading for an IPO and would include Barrick's joint-venture interests in Nevada Gold Mines in Dominican Republic as well as Pueblo Viejo. It would also include the Fourmile discovery of gold.

Barrick and rival Newmont jointly own Nevada Gold Mines - the world's biggest gold-producing complex - and Barrick is looking to develop the Fourmile Gold Mine in the U.S. State. The Fourmile Mine test production will not begin until 2029.

It said that the Canadian miner intends to retain a controlling majority while offering a minority stake.

The miner stated that it will provide an update regarding the IPO evaluation in February.

Mark Hill, interim CEO said: "We are focused on improving performance and shareholder values with the right team in place now to deliver on our promises."

Barrick had a turbulent year. A long-running dispute over the gold mine it owns in Mali led to the write-off of $1 billion and the abrupt departure of Mark Bristow, its CEO.

Barrick has mines throughout the world, including in Mali and Nevada. It also operates gold mines in Tanzania, Dominican Republic and Papua New Guinea. (Reporting and editing by Leroy Leo, Shinjini Ganuli and Vallari Srivastava from Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)