-
Advertisement
BusinessCompanies

New | BHP shareholders poised to approve biggest spin-off in mining industry

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
A BHP mine in southern Australia as the company's shareholders are set to vote on Wednesday in the biggest spin-off in mining history. Photo: AFP
Reuters

BHP Billiton’s shareholders are expected to approve the biggest ever spin-off in the mining industry on Wednesday, seeking to wring more value out of a string of long-neglected aluminium, manganese, silver and nickel assets.

But the new company, South32, risks a tough May 18 debut on the Australian bourse, with investors nervous about weak commodity prices, short mine life spans and declining ore grades.

Reflecting this uncertainty, analyst valuations vary widely, with Morgan Stanley predicting it may start with a market worth of A$8.5 billion (US$6.7 billion) and Investec around $12 billion.

Advertisement

"I think a focused management team will be able to extract the best value for those assets over time. But if commodity prices are weak, it’s going to be a bit more problematic," said Paul Xiradis, chief executive of Ausbil Investment Management, a BHP Billiton Ltd shareholder.

Named after the 32nd parallel south line of latitude that links its main business centres in Perth and Johannesburg, South32 will produce alumina, aluminium, coal, manganese, nickel, silver, lead and zinc from mines and smelters in Australia, Brazil, Colombia, South Africa and Mozambique.

Advertisement

Those assets generated underlying earnings of US$446 million on revenue of US$8.3 billion last year.

"A lot of people who own BHP own it for the yield and for some exposure to the sector, and will not want to hold South32," said Nik Stanjevic, an analyst at British wealth manager Brewin Dolphin.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x