Canadian Manufacturing

First Quantum closes in on Inmet takeover; extends $5.1B offer

by The Canadian Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Manufacturing Mining & Resources Business mergers and acquisitions


Inmet board previously rejected takeover offer as inadequate

VANCOUVER—First Quantum Minerals Ltd. is extending its $5.1-billion hostile takeover bid for Inmet Mining Corp. another 10 days until March 21.

First Quantum’s previous deadline expired at midnight March 11 with some 61.45 per cent of outstanding Inmet shares having been tendered to its offer.

The Inmet board has rejected the $72 per share bid—half in cash and half in stock—as inadequate.

However, even though the Inmet board urged shareholders to reject the deal, it waived application of a shareholder rights plan that would have thwarted the unsolicited bid after it failed to come up with a rival offer.

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First Quantum CEO and chairman Philip Pascall declared himself “delighted” with the response to its offer.

“We have varied our offer such that the minimum tender condition will now be satisfied if more than 50 per cent of the Inmet shares have been tendered at the revised expiry time of the offer,” Pascall added.

“Accordingly, with all regulatory approvals already received, it is our expectation that we will be in a position to complete the offer and begin taking up and paying for shares shortly following the expiry of the offer on March 21, 2013.”

If more than two thirds of outstanding shares have been deposited by the new deadline, First Quantum will implement a subsequent transaction to acquire the balance of the Inmet shares, something that could take several months, the company said.

Inmet, with mining operations in Turkey, Spain and Finland, also owns 80 per cent of the Cobre Panama project through Minera Panama SA and the remainder is owned by Korea Panama Mining Corp.

The total cost of Cobre Panama is estimated at $6.2-billion, including $1.4-billion to be funded by Korea Panama Mining and $4.8-billion through Inmet.

Last year, Inmet signed a deal with a joint venture led by SNC-Lavalin Inc. for the first phase of the planning and construction of a process plant at the project.

First Quantum has said the combination of the two companies would create one of the world’s fastest growing copper miners with the potential to produce more than 1.3 million tonnes of copper annually by 2018.

The bid by First Quantum follows the sale of its operations in the Democratic Republic of Congo to Kazakhstani miner Eurasian Natural Resources Corp. for $1.25-billion.

First Quantum had written off the value of the assets in 2010 after its operations in Congo were nationalized by the government of the mineral-rich central African country.

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