Anglo American hires banks for coal assets sale, sources say
10 Jul 2024
LONDON (Reuters) - Anglo
American has hired three banks for the sale of its steelmaking coal assets,
which analysts value at as much as $5 billion and is part of a broader
restructuring to fend off an approach from rival BHP, two sources close to the
matter said on Tuesday.
However
the miner is still battling a fire ignited at its Grosvenor mine in Queensland
state on June 29, with assessment of the damage and re-opening likely to take
several months.
Signaling
the next phase of the divestment, Anglo has hired Goldman Sachs (GS), Morgan
Stanley (MS) and Centerview Partners - all previously brokers to the company -
to help with the sale of the assets, the two sources said.
Anglo,
GS and MS declined to comment. Centerview was not immediately available to
comment.
Analysts
said the Grosvenor mine fire had likely hit the timing of the sale process and
valuation of the assets. According to Jefferies, the mine accounts for about
30% of the $4.5 billion value the brokerage attributes to Anglo's steelmaking
coal business.
Metallurgical
coal, which hit a record $635 a ton in March 2022 amid concerns over global
supplies following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, stood at around $250 on
Tuesday.
The
Grosvenor mine produced 2.797 million tons of metallurgical coal in 2023,
making up 17% of Anglo's coal output, according to its annual report. In 2024,
it expected the mine to produce 3.5 million tons. The company is the world's
third-largest exporter of metallurgical coal.
Grosvenor
had already been shut for a year in May 2020 after an explosion injured five
workers and triggered a government inquiry, as it repeatedly produced more
methane gas than it could remove. Safety measures were then put in place and no
injuries were recorded in June.