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Rio Tinto decides to hang on to diamonds business

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Argyle Pink Diamonds manager Josephine Johnson inspects the biggest 'red' diamond ever produced by mining giant Rio Tinto's Australian mine. Photo: AFP
Reuters

Global miner Rio Tinto Ltd has scrapped the planned sale of its diamonds business, valued in its books at US$1.3 billion (HK$10.1 billion), amid a slide in global financial markets and a tough environment for commodity asset sales.

The decision announced on Monday marks the first of a string of planned asset sales that the world no.3 miner may have to scrap in face of cautious bidders.

Rio has been looking to sell iron ore, copper, coal and aluminium assets to pare US$19 billion in net debt, cut costs, and beef up returns to shareholders, but has said all along it was not holding a fire sale.

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“We have valuable, high-quality diamonds businesses that are well positioned to capitalise on the positive market outlook,” Rio Tinto Diamonds & Minerals chief executive Alan Davies said in a statement on Monday.

“After considering a number of alternative strategic ownership options it is clear the best path to generate maximum value for our shareholders is to retain these businesses.”

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Rio Tinto put its diamonds arm up for sale in March last year soon after rival BHP Billiton put its diamonds unit on the block. BHP won the race to find a buyer last November, selling to Harry Winston, now called Dominion Diamond Corp.

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