Glencore and Xstrata agree $90bn ‘merger of equals’
Glencore and Xstrata agreed an all-share merger worth $90bn (£56bn) in the mining industry’s largest ever deal, creating a commodities powerhouse spanning mining, agriculture and trading.
The ratio is a 15.2 per cent premium to Xstrata shareholders compared with its share price last Wednesday before word leaked out about the merger talks, a joint statement said.
“A merger between Glencore and Xstrata offers a unique opportunity to create a new business model in our industry to respond to a changing environment. It is the logical next step for two complementary businesses,” said Xstrata chief executive Mick Davis, who will be chief executive of the enlarged Glencore.
Glencore chief executive Ivan Glasenberg will be deputy and Xstrata chairman John Bond will retain his post.
Xstrata shareholders other than Glencore, which already has a 34 per cent stake in the mining group, will hold 45 per cent of the new group.
Bringing together Xstrata, the world’s fourth-biggest diversified miner, and Glencore will create a group looking to ride an extended surge in demand in coming years for commodities from China and other emerging nations.
As the world’s biggest exporter of coal for power plants and a top copper producer, the combined firm aims to have the bulk to compete with mining sector leaders BHP Billiton, Vale and Rio Tinto.
On Monday, Xstrata shares closed down 1.7 per cent while Glencore declined 4.5 per cent, against a one per cent fall in the sector, with both still above the level they were at before the potential deal was announced.