CAPITAL MARKETS

"Equinox might have been…one of the five worst acquisitions in [mining] history"

Barrick Gold (TSX: ABX) executive chairman John Thornton outlined plans for the gold miner's copper assets, growth and increasing partnerships with China in a wide-ranging "town hall" meeting last week.

Staff reporter
Barrick executive chairman John Thornton

Barrick executive chairman John Thornton

"In the 21st century, there's no leading company in any industry in any part of the world that can afford not to have a distinctive relationship with China," Thornton said.

He said step one was Barrick's Veladero 50/50 joint venture with Shandong Gold and step two was underway, with Shandong evaluating the Argentinian side of Pascua-Lama to see whether Veladero could be extended. 

Thornton said Barrick was looking to grow in an "economically attractive way" and acknowledged Barrick and the industry had a "lousy recent history" of buying companies.

"The acquisition of Equinox might have been if not the worst, one of the five worst acquisitions in [mining] history," he said.

"My message today is you can be sure that we will be just as disciplined on acquisitions as we were on divestments."

Bernstein analyst Christopher LaFemina last week dropped Barrick's buy rating to hold, warning of a growing risk of "value-destructive M&A".

Thornton made it clear Barrick would not acquire Detour Gold, as speculated, because it did not fit the company's criteria (of 500,000 ounces, 10-plus year mine and on the better half of the cost curve).   

He reiterated Barrick's plans to divest assets that were neither non-core or strategic, including Hemlo, Lagunas and its 50% stake in Kalgoorlie Consolidated Gold Mines.

"We are constantly assessing ‘what do we think of those assets which are neither tier one nor strategic, and when we will get rid of them?'" he said. 

However he said Barrick was less likely to sell its copper assets and become a pure gold company, because gold had short-lived assets and very few tier-one assets.

He said it was more likely Barrick would partner with a Chinese company to build the copper assets into a "first-tier global copper company over time".

"They're very long-term in orientation, they need it, they're already buying up copper, so it makes all kinds of sense," he said.

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the farming sector, brought to you by the Kondinin team.

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the farming sector, brought to you by the Kondinin team.

editions

Mining Journal Intelligence Investor Sentiment Report 2024

Survey revealing the plans, priorities, and preferences of 120+ mining investors and their expectations for the sector in 2024.

editions

Mining Journal Intelligence Mining Equities Report 2023

Access an exclusive, inside look on the quarterly mining IPOs and secondary raisings data and mining equities performance tables with an annual Stock Exchange Comparisons supplement.

editions

Mining Journal Intelligence World Risk Report 2023 (feat. MineHutte ratings)

A detailed analysis of mining investment risks across 121 jurisdictions globally, built on 11 ‘hard risk’ metrics and an industrywide survey.

editions

Mining Journal Intelligence Global Leadership Report 2023: Social licence

Gain insights into social licence trends and best practices from interviews with 20+ top mining company executives and an industrywide survey.