Indonesia Moves Closer to Taking Controlling Stake in Freeport Copper Mine
July 12 2018 - 9:51AM
Dow Jones News
By Ben Otto and Anita Rachman
JAKARTA, Indonesia -- Indonesia, Freeport-McMoRan Inc. and Rio
Tinto announced a tentative $3.85 billion agreement to give Jakarta
majority control of the world's second-biggest copper mine,
potentially advancing a deal amid a yearslong conflict that has
spooked mining investors and threatened metal supplies.
In a preliminary deal signed Thursday, Indonesia agreed to pay
$3.85 billion for a controlling stake in Grasberg, a massive
copper-and-gold mine that has been run by Freeport in the country's
remote east since the early 1990s. The move would raise Indonesia's
stake in the lucrative mine to about 51% from less than 10%
currently.
In a two-step deal, state-owned mining holding company PT
Indonesia Asahan Aluminium, or Inalum, would pay $3.5 billion for
an interest Australian miner Rio Tinto holds in Grasberg, Inalum
head Budi Gunadi Sadikin told reporters. Freeport would then
convert that interest into an equity stake and sell Inalum another
approximately 9% stake for $350 million, giving Indonesia majority
ownership, Mr. Sadikin said.
Rio Tinto confirmed the proposed price for its interest in
Grasberg and called the deal nonbinding. It said all parties would
seek to sign a binding deal by the end of the year.
Reza Pratama, a Freeport spokesman, confirmed the total proposed
price of $3.85 billion.
Freeport shares added 2.1% in U.S. premarket trading, while Rio
Tinto shares were up 0.5% in London.
Freeport Chief Executive Richard Adkerson, who signed the deal
alongside Indonesian officials in Jakarta, said it was a "very
positive and important step" in negotiations that he said had gone
on for more than six years.
Indonesian officials have previously said that Arizona-based
Freeport, the world's largest publicly traded copper miner, will
remain operator of Grasberg, a complex mountaintop mine on the
Indonesian part of New Guinea Island.
"This is a leap forward," President Joko Widodo told reporters
ahead of the signing. "We expect we'll get bigger income from
taxes, royalties, dividends" so that mining commodities "can really
be enjoyed by us all. The national interest must take
precedence."
Freeport has mined Grasberg since the early 1990s under a deal
that expires in 2021, but the company has been seeking to extend
its contract another 20 years to be able to invest billions into
taking the open-pit operations underground. To do that, Freeport
last August ceded to longstanding Indonesian demands to divest a
minority stake in the mine, but talks have since been hung up on
disagreements over valuation, environmental practices and other
issues.
Mining analysts called the tentative agreement a step forward in
those talks, if far from a finished deal.
The signing is partly "an interim face-saving strategy" for Mr.
Widodo ahead of national elections next year, giving the president
a sign of progress in a long-running dispute with one of
Indonesia's largest foreign investors, said Bill Sullivan, a
Jakarta-based adviser to mining companies. "It is imperative [that
Mr. Widodo] be able to show the people of Indonesia that he has
delivered something."
But the signing is "only the beginning of the end," he added.
"There is much potential for serious differences to arise," and "in
this type of complex situation, the devil is always in the
details."
Mr. Widodo's political opponents "will lambaste him on the
campaign trail for not being nationalist enough or for somehow
being a proxy for foreign or private interests," said Hugo Brennan,
a senior Asia politics analyst with risk-consulting firm Verisk
Maplecroft. "A deal to bring Grasberg into majority state ownership
would undermine that line of attack."
Analysts said the signing could also could give the government a
basis for extending Freeport's current mining license as the talks
continue. The government last week extended Freeport's expiring
license, but only through the end of July.
The battle has at times unsettled the roughly $150 billion
copper market, for which a mine the size of Grasberg can be the
difference between a global shortfall or surplus. Talks took place
while analysts were forecasting an upswing for prices, aided by
everything from surging electric vehicle sales to rising Chinese
consumer demand for air conditioners and electronics. Copper hit a
four-year high in early June, though it has fallen more than 15%
since then with trade threats roiling markets.
--Rhiannon Hoyle in Sydney contributed to this article.
Write to Ben Otto at ben.otto@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 12, 2018 09:36 ET (13:36 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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