Shareholders want Glasenberg to hold off on buying, hope to see
more cost savings
By Scott Patterson and Alex MacDonald
LONDON -- A year of debt cuts, asset sales and rising commodity
prices have pulled Glencore PLC back from the brink of crisis. Now,
the mining and trading giant's shareholders have a new concern:
That Chief Executive Ivan Glasenberg might return to his
free-spending ways.
Mr. Glasenberg spent much of the past decade as the commodities
industry's biggest deal maker, snapping up coal, copper and gold
mines in places such as East Africa, South America and Australia.
After a mounting debt pile and sagging commodities prices sent
Glencore shares tumbling last year -- the stock price fell 29% on a
single day, Sept. 28 in London -- investors pressured Mr.
Glasenberg to slash borrowing and unload unprofitable mines. He
suspended the company's dividend, laid off workers to cut costs,
and trimmed the company's debt load to more sustainable levels,
investors say.
With shares up about 180% since the free fall, Baar,
Switzerland-based Glencore recently emerged as a contender in
bidding for several big properties, including Australian coal
assets that Rio Tinto PLC and Anglo American PLC were looking to
sell, say people familiar with the sales talks.
Investors say Mr. Glasenberg has work to do before he can
responsibly start buying, and are hoping to hear more about cost
savings than new spending when the company reports earnings on Aug.
24.
"First, we have to finish the deleveraging, then we have to
restore the dividend," said David Herro, a fund manager for Harris
Associates LP who controls about 6% of Glencore's stock, valued at
about $2 billion.
Mr. Herro snapped up billions of dollars of Glencore's stock
last autumn as it fell, and said Glencore should consider whether
stock buybacks make more sense than deals.
A spokesman for Glencore declined to comment.
Mr. Glasenberg transformed Glencore from a trading house into
one of the world's biggest miners, with deals like the $29.5
billion acquisition of coal miner Xstrata in 2013. But his big bets
fell flat over the past two years, when commodities prices crashed.
Coal, despite a rebound this year, remains under pressure due in
part to world-wide attempts to curb global warming by reducing
carbon emissions from coal-burning power plants.
Glencore lost $5 billion in 2015, and its stock remains more
than 60% below its 2011 offering price.
There is little question Glencore's situation has improved from
a year ago, when Mr. Glasenberg was fending off investor fears that
his mining and trading house was a debt-bloated powder keg on the
verge of exploding.
At the end of 2015, Glencore's net debt -- which doesn't include
billions of dollars of borrowing that fuels its trading business --
had dipped to $25.9 billion from $29.6 billion midyear. Glencore
says it plans to reduce the debt load to $17 billion to $18 billion
by the end of 2016.
"Management is doing exactly what they should be doing," said
Harris Associates' Mr. Herro.
Last week, Glencore reported lower copper, coal and zinc output
in the second quarter, compared with a year earlier, due largely to
voluntary mine closures.
Glencore has already raised $2.5 billion in a share offering and
$1.4 billion in a pair of "streaming" deals, which give Glencore
upfront cash in exchange for gold or silver down the road. The
dividend suspension has saved about $2.4 billion in cash. In the
second half of the year, Glencore says it expects to book about
$3.13 billion from the sale of nearly half of its agricultural
business and an additional $100 million from the sale of a Kazakh
gold deposit.
Glencore is also exploring the sale of another Kazakh gold mine
that could fetch $2 billion and Australian rail assets that could
raise an additional $750 million or more, analysts say.
Charl Malan, a portfolio manager for Van Eck Global, which holds
roughly $200 million of Glencore stock, said the company should
continue cutting debt and return cash to shareholders before
looking for new investments. He said Glencore should restore the
dividend by sometime next year, depending on commodity prices.
"Management is not going to be driven by, 'I want more coal, I
want more copper,'" Mr. Malan said. "Management will be driven by
what is best for shareholders."
One risk is that commodity prices could fall. Some analysts say
a round of Chinese stimulus this year has fueled prices, and they
could slide once that stimulus ends.
Other investors harbor concerns about the long-term value of
coal, in which Glencore says it could invest more. Hermes
Investment Management partner Bruce Duguid said his clients who
have invested in Glencore worry the company hasn't adequately
calculated the risks of policies intended to curb global
warming.
Glencore said it expects demand for thermal coal -- which is
used to produce power -- to increase for years, especially in
Southeast Asia.
"We're wary of the idea that you can predict the world with
great confidence, given the commodity crash that just happened was
based on the misunderstanding of demand," Mr. Duguid said.
Write to Scott Patterson at scott.patterson@wsj.com and Alex
MacDonald at alex.macdonald@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 18, 2016 02:49 ET (06:49 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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