BHP has walked away from another attempt to take over rival miner Anglo American after it was again rebuffed, failing in a last-minute effort to disrupt the planned merger with Canadian mining business Teck Resources.
The Australian mining company reportedly became interested in making another offer for FTSE 100-listed Anglo last week, more than a year after abandoning a £39bn attempt to buy the business.
The latest failed overture comes as Anglo and Teck shareholders prepare to vote on their $53bn (£39bn) merger on 9 December.
BHP confirmed on Monday it had held preliminary discussions with Anglo but that it was “no longer considering a combination of the two companies” and would focus on its own portfolio.
It told investors: “While BHP continues to believe that a combination with Anglo American would have had strong strategic merits and created significant value for all stakeholders, BHP is confident in the highly compelling potential of its own organic growth strategy.”
Under city takeover rules, BHP is blocked from making another bid for Anglo for six months, unless there is a significant change in circumstances.
Anglo’s vast reserves of copper are an important driver of interest in the business because the mineral is an important building block for low-carbon technologies such as solar farms and electric cars.
BHP made three failed attempts last year to agree to a merger with Anglo before it declared in October that it had “moved on”.
Shares in Anglo, which is listed in London, have risen by more than two-thirds since the start of 2024 and are up by almost a quarter since BHP made its first offer in May last year.
BHP’s bid last year met fierce opposition from Anglo’s board, which included conditions to sell its South African business interests, and was ultimately dismissed as “highly complex and unattractive”.
The impending deal between Teck and Anglo still needs approval of regulators in various countries, including China, the US and Canada.
While the Anglo-Teck merger is expected to trigger more deal activity in the mining sector, Kathleen Brooks, of the broker XTB, said the move was designed in part to rebuff other takeover attempts.
“BHP has now said that it has walked away from the deal; however, if there was deep concern about the global economy or the potential for a deep stock market crash, then it would be unlikely to see any takeover attempts, rebuffed or not, in the resources sector,” she said. – www.theguardian.com
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Anglo American owns De Beers, which has joint ventures in the diamond industry with the Namibian government.
- Photo: Contributed
