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China buys cash one of Peru's largest copper mines operated by Glencore Xstrata

Tuesday, April 15th 2014 - 06:39 UTC
Full article 17 comments
The deal involved 6bn dollars and the mine is expected to produce 450.000 tons of copper annually The deal involved 6bn dollars and the mine is expected to produce 450.000 tons of copper annually

Chinese consortium is buying Glencore Xstrata's copper mine in Peru in a 6bn dollars all-cash deal, marking one of China's largest mining acquisitions. The consortium is led by MMG Limited and includes China's Citic Metal.

 The acquisition is subject to regulatory approvals but all parties expect the deal to be done by the end of September. Analysts expect Glencore to use the proceeds from the sale to reduce its debt.

The mine is expected to produce more than 450,000 tonnes of copper a year in its first five years. China relies heavily on the metal, which is used in electronics production.

Ivan Glasenberg, Glencore's chief executive, said in a statement: “Since we acquired Xstrata... our team has taken decisive steps to de-risk Las Bambas, which has culminated in this compelling offer from the consortium.”

“Our willingness to sell reflects the level of the offer and our conviction that we can utilise the sale proceeds to create additional shareholder value.”

Glencore and Xstrata merged in May last year.

China gave its approval to the merger after Glencore agreed to sell its stake in Xstrata's copper mining project in Peru to a buyer approved by Chinese authorities. The mining giant also agreed to supply a minimum volume of copper concentrate to China for a period of eight years.

The Peruvian authorities were concerned that the merger between Glencore and Xstrata would have given the business too much power over the copper market. China is the world's biggest buyer of copper.

The Peru copper mine deal comes days after UK department store chain House of Fraser sold a majority stake in its business to the Chinese conglomerate Sanpower, in a 803m dollars deal. That acquisition represents China's largest foreign retail investment and gives Sanpower an 89% share in House of Fraser.

And earlier this year personal computer maker Lenovo spent around $ And earlier this year personal computer maker Lenovo spent around 5bn on acquisitions, which included the purchase of IBM's low-end server unit.

Top Comments

Disclaimer & comment rules
  • GeoffWard2

    I hope some 'research centre' somewhere is plotting the change of ownerships of the big corporations of the world - especially those operating in developing countries - to see the spread of the Chinese tentacles.
    The food and raw materials of the whole world will move just one way - to China. Then the possibility of other parts of the world to industrialise and re-industrialise will be forever lost. The thousands of years of Chinese 'slave states' will continue unabated and ever accelerating.
    Yes, it worries me.

    Apr 15th, 2014 - 11:01 am 0
  • ilsen

    China is currently the largest FDI in Africa. Fact.

    Soon to be in Latin America too?

    Is that canal still going ahead?
    They don't come cheap. ..

    Apr 15th, 2014 - 11:56 am 0
  • Condorito

    @1 Geoff
    I see you are still worried by the Chinese.

    What is the problem with China buying productive enterprises in other countries? The Peruvian mine in question was previously owned by Glencore Xstrata a Swiss holding. Were you worried at the prospect of the Swiss buying up Peru?

    You would probably find that there is more Chilean capital in Peru than Chinese. Is that a threat?

    You have got to get over your irrational fear of China.

    Apr 15th, 2014 - 12:41 pm 0
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