South Africa’s Sibanye Gold took a major
step outside its home market on Friday with a $2.2-billion deal to buy
Stillwater Mining, the only U.S. miner of platinum and palladium.
If
it goes through, the cash takeover will increase South Africa’s grip
over global platinum and palladium supply and underline chief executive
Neal Froneman’s determination to branch out of gold mining and South
Africa.
However, the price Sibanye is offering to
increase its own share of supplies of the precious metals is larger than
its market value and the move triggered a sharp fall in its stock.
Sibanye
said it would buy Stillwater, which operates in Montana and is the
largest primary producer of platinum group metals (PMGs) outside South
Africa and Russia, with a loan that it will re-finance with debt plus a
rights issue of at least $750-million.
Froneman
wants to cut the bullion miner’s dependence on gold and platinum in
South Africa, where a volatile currency, labour strikes and strict
government rules have weighed on Sibanye’s share price.
The
deal, the second-biggest South African outbound M&A transaction so
far this year, will make Sibanye the world’s third largest palladium
producer and fourth largest platinum group metals miner, Froneman said.
Some analysts highlighted the risks as the platinum market sinks into oversupply.
But
while demand from the diesel car sector for platinum, which is used in
catalytic converters, is under pressure because of air pollution
concerns, palladium used in hybrid petrol cars could see higher
consumption and the market is in deficit.
Palladium
reached its most expensive versus platinum since early 2002 last month
as the U.S. election result sparked a surge in cyclical assets.
“It’s
a tier one asset in palladium in the United States,” a source close to
the deal said. “Normally in the U.S., there would be a 30-40 per cent
premium. This is around 20 per cent.”
Sibanye
said it would pay $18.00 per share in cash for Stillwater, a 23 per
cent premium over Thursday’s closing price, which it was initially
financing through a $2.675-billion loan arranged by HSBC and Citigroup.
“These are some of the lowest cost ounces in the world,” said Froneman, referring to Stillwater’s operations.
SHARES UNDER PRESSURE
Sibanye’s
shares dropped 18 per cent to an 11-month low, but recovered slightly
to close 15.3 per cent weaker at 24.01 rand, their biggest daily
percentage drop on record.
By 1512 GMT, shares in Stillwater had surged 18.5 per cent to $17.41, a touch below the offer price.
Froneman
said Sibanye’s share price was too low, even though it paid
“industry-leading dividends” and this was partly because it was “not as
geographically diverse” as some competitors.
Sibanye
did not detail any regulatory hurdles, saying only the deal – which is
backed by Stillwater’s board – was conditional on the required
authorisations.
It said it needed deal
approval from its own and Stillwater’s shareholders, although it already
has the support of 29 per cent of its own investors.
Sibanye
was spun off from Gold Fields in 2013. It bought Aquarius Platinum and
Anglo American Platinum’s Rustenburg mines last year.
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