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Exxaro considers larger payouts to shareholders after manganese purchase, shares rise

Exxaro considers larger payouts to shareholders after manganese purchase, shares rise

Exxaro Resources, a South African miner, is looking at increasing shareholder returns after it closes the deal it announced in May for manganese assets. It will not need a large cash buffer to finance acquisitions anymore, said its CEO on Thursday.

The company's shares rose 9% following the announcement of a 13% rise in its half-year profits thanks to increased coal income.

The company announced on May 13 that it had entered into an agreement with Ntsimbintle Holdings, and OM Holdings to purchase manganese mines in South Africa. This is part of the company's strategy to diversify its business away from coal to minerals essential for global energy technology shifts to cleaner technologies.

CEO Ben Magara stated that the final transaction value is expected to be between 9 billion to 14.64 billion rand (507 million to $825 million) depending on how much minority shareholders exercise their tag-along and pre-emptive rights.

After the manganese transaction, he stated that Exxaro will no longer need to maintain a cash buffer of 12 to 15 billion rands to fund acquisitions.

Magara said: "We are now reviewing capital allocation framework in order to increase shareholder returns following the manganese deal."

Riaan Koppeschaar, finance director at the Ministry of Finance, said that higher dividends was one option to consider.

Koppeschaar stated during a call to discuss results that "we still need the manganese transactions, the final figures, before we can make final decisions." Exxaro anticipates that the transaction will be completed during the first quarter 2026.

Exxaro reported headline earnings per share at 17.24 rand for the six-month period ending June 30 compared with 15.28 rand last year.

It declared a dividend of 8.43 Rand per share. This is 6% more than the payout for last year.

Exxaro ended the first half of 2018 with a cash balance of 12,4 billion rands.

Magara said that while the miner is still looking at other metal assets, it does not expect to pursue deals as large as the manganese transaction.

(source: Reuters)