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CORRECTED-BHP's Anglo buyout makes company sense if the rate is best: Russell

BHP Group's. proposed takeover of competing miner Anglo American is one of those. rare instances where a megamerger really makes strong. service sense, however it will be hard to manage to the. satisfaction of all celebrations.

BHP, the world's largest mining company, provided. $ 39 billion last week to purchase Anglo, a move the. London-listed miner that grew out of South Africa rejected as. significantly underestimated.

The expectation now is that BHP may improve its deal, or. other purchasers for Anglo, or parts of its varied portfolio,. may emerge.

Much of the limelights has focused on Anglo's copper. assets as the lure for BHP, with a combined company ending up being the. world's biggest manufacturer of the commercial metal with a share of. around 10%.

In result, BHP's bid is mainly viewed as a massive vote of. self-confidence in the future of copper, which is important to the. energy transition provided its properties as a conductor and its. resistance to rust.

The quote may also be an indirect admission on BHP's part that. buying copper possessions is far easier than trying to find them and. develop new mines.

Anglo has interests in 3 copper mines in Chile and its. production in the 2023 financial year was 507,000 metric heaps,. which resulted in underlying earnings before interest, taxes,. depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) of $1.452 billion.

The London-listed miner also has a 60% share in the. Quellaveco mine in Peru, which gave it production of 319,000. heaps and EBITDA of $1.781 billion.

This gave Anglo total copper output of 826,000 loads and. EBITDA of $3.233 billion, or 32% of the group's total for 2023.

BHP's copper service is more diversified, with operations. in Chile, Peru, Australia and the United States, and in the 2023. financial year production was 1.717 million heaps for an. underlying EBITDA of $6.65 billion.

For the sake of argument, assume Anglo's copper earnings can. be maintained and the copper price remains stable, it would take. about 6 years for the profits to pay off half of BHP's. present offer cost for Anglo.

Naturally, it's most likely that there would be some expense. synergies, and it's likewise most likely the case that copper prices. rally, particularly if the energy shift begins to speed up.

That would make Anglo's copper assets better to BHP. as the return would be over a shorter period.

Obviously, this presumes that BHP's view of Anglo's possessions is. that copper is effectively half of the worth of the overall. company, although its only 14.5% of underlying EBITDA.

The concern for investors taking a look at BHP's proposed. takeover of Anglo is just how much are Anglo's non-copper assets. worth, can they be disposed of effectively, or incorporated into. the wider group.

COAL, IRON ORE

The property that fits best with BHP's existing portfolio is. Anglo's metallurgical coal mines in Australia's Queensland. state.

BHP, through its alliance with Japan's Mitsubishi, is the. world's largest exporter of the coal used mainly to make. steel, while Anglo ranks 3rd.

Integrating their assets would develop a dominant metallurgical. coal player, a lot so that the deal is likely to draw in. examination from regulators, especially in nations like Japan,. which source the huge bulk of their coal from Australia.

The current BHP proposition anticipates Anglo's South African iron. ore assets, held through Kumba Iron Ore, and the. platinum mines of Anglo American Platinum, being. divested and distributed to shareholders.

This may provide problems for the South African authorities,. but it's likewise a sad reflection of how global companies. are no longer keen on possessions in the nation that was when. renowned as a centre of mining excellence.

Iron ore is BHP's most significant earner, and the state-of-the-art. product produced by Kumba would work in the portfolio, however. South Africa's political risk and falling apart facilities make. it unsightly.

Anglo's Brazilian iron ore operations also provide top-quality. ore, which BHP might incorporate or look for to sell off.

Platinum is a product that may struggle in the energy. shift, provided its usage in catalytic converters for internal. combustion engine lorries.

Anglo's other interests, such as diamonds through De Beers,. and manganese through Samancor, could most likely be sold to. existing partners: the Botswana government for De Beers and. South 32 for the manganese.

In general, the mechanics of the offer seem to make good sense. for BHP.

They can be made to make sense for Anglo's investors if. the offer is raised high enough so that they can't state no.

Winning over numerous regulators throughout several countries may. be much more difficult, and compromises might be required, and that. could end up undermining the extremely logic of the deal in the very first. place.

Disclosure: At the time of publication Clyde Russell owned. shares in BHP Group as an investor in a fund.

The viewpoints expressed here are those of the author, a columnist. .

(source: Reuters)