CPECN

Centamin rejects Endeavour Mining takeover bid

Don Horne   

News

Gold miner Centamin Plc has rejected a $1.9 billion all-stock takeover proposal from Canada’s Endeavour Mining, saying it did not offer enough value to Centamin shareholders.
“The terms of the proposal provide comparatively greater benefit to Endeavour’s shareholders, do not adequately reflect the contribution that Centamin would make to the merged entity,” Centamin told Reuters.
Toronto-listed Endeavour announced its offer, a 13 per cent premium to Centamin’s last closing price, earlier in the day, seeking to gain control of Centamin’s only operating mine, the Sukari project in Egypt.
Endeavour said Centamin had rebuffed several attempts to engage in talks.
Endeavour told Reuters it planned to offer 0.0846 of its own shares for each Centamin share.
The combined entity would have produced 1.2 million ounces of gold in 2019 at an all-in sustainable cost – a key industry benchmark – of $875 per ounce, which would make it one of the world’s largest and lowest cost miners, Endeavour said.
Centamin shares have underperformed Endeavour’s over the last two years, according to Reuters.
“My idea of fair value is a lot higher up, it probably starts with a ‘2’,” Eric Moore, portfolio manager at Miton Group, the ninth biggest shareholder in Centamin with a stake of about 1.4 per cent, according to Refinitiv Eikon data. “It might be this is just an opening shot and we’ll see how it evolves.”
The gold industry has seen a flurry of deals over the past year as companies attempt to squeeze more value from operations after years of subdued activity and low returns.
Barrick Gold’s purchase of Randgold was followed by the Newmont and Goldcorp tie-up. More recently, Kirkland Lake Gold announced a takeover of Detour Gold.
Mark Burridge, fund manager at Baker Steel Capital Managers which owns shares in Centamin and Endeavour, told Reuters the deal was compelling because it would create a larger and “more investible” entity.
Centamin has struggled shifting from open pit to underground at the Sukari mine and said in October it was looking for a new chief executive after its incumbent retired.
“We believe the Endeavour all share merger proposal for Centamin would provide the management and operational direction Centamin has lacked for the past two years,” analysts at broker Peel Hunt told Reuters.
Endeavour, which operates four mines in West Africa, said Sukari would also benefit from the fact that La Mancha – a private gold mining group chaired by Egyptian billionaire Naguib Sawiris – would become a key investor. The Sawiris family is Endeavour’s top shareholder.
A top Centamin investor said Egyptian government approval would be key to sealing the deal.
Endeavour first showed interest in Centamin in 2018 with a proposal that was promptly rejected. It then sent a formal proposal last month, hoping to engage with Centamin’s board.
(Reuters)


Print this page

Advertisement

Stories continue below