Glencore To Announce Decision on Potential Coal Demerger Next Week
31 Jul 2024
Glencore
expects to announce next week its decision on whether it would spin off its
coal and carbon steel materials business, the mining and commodity trading
giant said on
Tuesday.
Earlier this month, after receiving the final regulatory approval
for the acquisition of Elk Valley Resources (EVR), the coal business of Teck
Resources, Glencore said that “we
will shortly commence a consultation process to assess shareholder views
regarding the potential demerger of the combined coal and carbon steel
materials business.”
In Glencore’s half-year production report published today,
Glencore’s chief executive officer Gary Nagle said “As announced earlier this
month, post the acquisition of EVR, we are now in the process of consulting
with shareholders to assess their views regarding the potential demerger of our
coal and carbon steel materials business.”
“We expect to be able to announce the outcome of such engagement
and the decision of the Board regarding the potential demerger alongside our
interim results next week,” Nagle added.
According to analysts at Jefferies, Glencore is unlikely to spin
off its coal business.
In a note from Jefferies cited by The Wall
Street Journal, analysts Christopher LaFemina and Patricia Hove wrote “We
believe a coal demerger is highly unlikely, and we believe the acquisition…
will prove to be a significant positive for Glencore as this is the world’s
highest quality metallurgical coal business by a fairly wide margin.”
In the production report, Glencore revised up its steelmaking coal
production guidance for 2024 to between 19 million and 21 million tons, up from
between 7 million to 9 million tons previously, thanks to the inclusion of 12
million tons of expected coal production volumes from the newly-acquired EVR in
the second half of the year. In the energy coal business, the expected H2/H1
uplift would come mainly from Glencore’s Australian assets, reflecting longwall
changes, improved equipment availability, and reduced strip ratios, the mining
and commodity trading giant said.