Teck receives several proposals for coal unit amid Glencore takeover bid
07 Jun 2023
The logo for Canadian mining company Teck Resources Limited is
displayed above their booth at the Prospectors and Developers Association of
Canada (PDAC) annual conference in Toronto, Ontario, Canada March 7, 2023.
REUTERS/Chris Helgren
TORONTO,
June 6 (Reuters) - Teck Resources (TECKb.TO) said on Tuesday it has
received several proposals for its steelmaking coal business, without revealing
if one included a revised offer from Swiss trading and mining firm Glencore (GLEN.L) which launched its takeover bid
for the Canadian miner over two months ago.
Vancouver-based
Teck said in a statement its board will evaluate all "actionable,
value-accretive proposals" before making a decision, noting that a
transaction is not guaranteed.
It did not reveal the names of
interested parties, or whether it includes an offer from Glencore.
Glencore
declined to comment on Tuesday when asked if it has presented a revised offer
to Teck's board or its shareholders.
Teck's
coal mines are among the few left in the world, which makes it attractive to
Glencore as it seeks to combine them with its own thermal coal business.
Glencore has said that it would consider buying Teck's coal business alone.
Reuters previously reported that
Canadian mining entrepreneur Pierre Lassonde is forming a consortium to buy a
stake in Teck's coal business, while Japanese steel maker Nippon Steel Corporation (5401.T) has also said it is in talks with Teck to invest in the coal
business.
A partial
or full sale of Teck's coal business would end Glencore's effort to revive its
$22 billion offer for Teck, which the Canadian company has rebuffed twice. In
its latest revised offer on April 11, Glencore offered to pay $8.2 billion in
cash for Teck's coal business to shareholders, a valuation in-line with what
analysts' estimates.
In late
April, Teck withdrew the plan to split its copper and
coal business after failing to secure enough shareholder support, and promised
to present a "simpler and more direct" split. Glencore had told
Teck's shareholders that if they rejected Teck's proposed split it
will put forward a sweetened offer, which is yet to materialize.
Teck shares rose 3% to C$57.16 at
end of Tuesday's trade.
Lassonde
told Reuters in a text message on Monday that there are many Canadians who have
been "incredibly supportive" to keep Teck's coal business in Canadian
hands. But he declined to give details of his consortium members saying the
parties have signed a confidentiality agreement.