H
business
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Glencore and Rio Tinto are at it again – and it seems the markets smell action

2 days ago
A picture


Here we go again.A combination of Rio Tinto and Glencore has been talked about for years and the duo held aborted negotiations at the end of 2024.With the global mining industry in deal-making mode – frenzies come along every 15 years or so – the idea of RioGlen or GlenTinto was due another whirl.On Friday, the two FTSE 100 companies said they were in “preliminary discussions” about a “possible combination of some or all of their businesses”.A full-blown tie-up would be worth about $260bn (£120bn), including debt.

Many of the old challenges to a deal haven’t gone away.Glencore’s roots lie in trading commodities; Rio is a traditional pure miner, so the fit is culturally imperfect.Does Rio, which got out of coal as long ago as 2018 under investor pressure, really want to go back in by adding Glencore’s significant assets in that area? Reports suggested it is prepared to do so.But, if not, should coal be hived off beforehand? Should Glencore’s trading operation go with it?And, given that Rio is significantly larger, would a deal be a merger or a takeover? The latter implies an offer at a decent premium to Glencore’s recent share price, which Rio’s shareholders might find hard to swallow.Glencore’s shares rose by 9%, and Rio’s fell 2%, implying the market smells action of some form.

First, Rio has a new chief executive, Simon Trott, who sounds keener on mega-deals than his predecessor, who was instinctively cautious (perhaps remembering Rio’s reckless top-of-the-market $38bn cash purchase of the aluminium group Alcan in 2007).Second, the deal-doing fun in mining land went up a gear when Anglo-American unveiled its $50bn merger with the Canadian group Teck Resources last year.The impetus for that one was exposure to copper, the in-demand metal for electrification of the world’s energy systems and vehicles.A generation ago, global miners craved iron ore to feed China’s demand for steel for construction; now the buzz is all about copper.Anglo and Teck could boast that 70% of their earnings come from the metal.

A Rio-Glencore combo would have a third of its earnings from copper, calculates investment bank Jefferies, if coal were out of the picture.“The merged company would have world-class iron ore, aluminium and copper assets with significant growth in copper,” says its analyst.“If completed, it would also be the largest market cap and most liquid equity in the sector.”That sounds the type of profile the Glencore chief executive, Gary Nagle, likes.“It makes sense to create bigger companies,” he said last month.

“Not just for the sake of size, but also to create material synergies, to create relevance, to attract talent, to attract capital.”Third, the deal-making mindset will only be encouraged by the thought that BHP, the sector’s biggest beast, may be itchy after making two bids for Anglo in 2024 and getting nowhere.So best to get in first – possibly – if BHP is also looking enviously at Glencore’s development projects in copper.Rio has four weeks to post an offer or shut up.Trott’s main challenge may be to persuade his own investors.

The Anglo-Teck deal was done at a zero takeover premium, which probably won’t be possible with Glencore.The risk, as Rio’s own history demonstrates, is overpaying at a frothy moment.
businessSee all
A picture

Wessex Water bosses handed £50,000 in extra pay despite Labour government’s bonus ban

The bosses of Wessex Water received £50,000 in previously undisclosed extra pay from a parent company, in the same year that the utility was banned from paying bonuses, the Guardian can reveal.Chief executive Ruth Jefferson and chief financial officer Andy Pymer were paid £24,000 and £27,000 respectively in the year to June 2025, according to a spokesperson for Wessex Water’s owner, the Malaysian YTL group.The payments came from Wessex Water Ltd, which is the parent company of Wessex Water Services Ltd, the regulated water supplier for 2.9 million customers in south-west England. YTL said the payments were not bonuses

1 day ago
A picture

US hiring held firm in December capping weakest year of growth since pandemic

Hiring held firm in the US last month, official data showed, amid uncertainty over the strength and direction of the world’s largest economy.Employers added 50,000 jobs to the US labor force last month, capping the weakest year of growth since the pandemic, according to data released from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday.The closely watched reading was slightly shy of the approximately 73,000 jobs economists expected to be added in the US economy in December.Previous readings for October and November were also revised lower, with the BLS now estimating that the US added 76,000 fewer jobs during those two months. In October, during the longest US government shutdown in history, the US economy shed 173,000 jobs

2 days ago
A picture

Glencore and Rio Tinto are at it again – and it seems the markets smell action

Here we go again. A combination of Rio Tinto and Glencore has been talked about for years and the duo held aborted negotiations at the end of 2024. With the global mining industry in deal-making mode – frenzies come along every 15 years or so – the idea of RioGlen or GlenTinto was due another whirl. On Friday, the two FTSE 100 companies said they were in “preliminary discussions” about a “possible combination of some or all of their businesses”. A full-blown tie-up would be worth about $260bn (£120bn), including debt

2 days ago
A picture

US economy added fewer jobs than forecast in December, but January interest rate cut very unlikely – as it happened

Newsflash: The US economy added fewer jobs than expected last month.America’s non-farm payroll rose by 50,000 in December, missing forecasts of a 60,000 rise.Employment continued to trend up in food services and drinking places, health care, and social assistance, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports, while retail trade lost jobs.That shows a hiring slowdown, compared with the previous month; the BLS now estimates that 56,000 jobs were created in November, 8,000 fewer than its first estimate of 64,000.Time to wrap up!Hiring held firm in the US last month, official data showed, amid uncertainty over the strength and direction of the world’s largest economy

2 days ago
A picture

High costs, falling returns: what could go wrong for Trump’s Venezuela oil gamble?

Donald Trump has laid claim to billions of dollars’ worth of Venezuelan crude this week, which at a stroke has handed the world’s biggest consumer of oil up to 50m barrels – but his ambitions are far greater.The White House said Venezuela would be “turning over” the nearly $3bn (£2.3bn) of crude stranded in tankers and storage facilities before it is sold on the international market and after that the US plans to control all the country’s oil sales “indefinitely”.For the Trump administration, the seizure is the first move in taking control of Venezuela’s vast crude reserves, estimated to represent almost a fifth of the proven reserves on Earth, in a push to cut the oil price to $50 a barrel.But experts have been quick to point out that the crude cargo grab could be the last easy win for the president, with no quick or cheap fix to reignite the country’s oil production

2 days ago
A picture

Charity watchdog opens inquiry into City & Guilds’ sale of business arm

The Charity Commission has opened a statutory inquiry into City & Guilds’ sale of its qualification awards business to a private company last year.The announcement has been made after the Guardian revealed last month how City & Guilds bosses were handed million-pound bonuses after the charity privatised its business arm.The payments – which are understood to include a £1.7m award for the chief executive, Kirstie Donnelly, and £1.2m to the finance director, Abid Ismail – emerged after reports of how the privatised City & Guilds business has also embarked on a £22m cost-cutting drive and is shrinking its UK workforce after being sold by its charity owner to PeopleCert, an international certification company

2 days ago
sportSee all
A picture

Kempton Park’s Lanzarote Hurdle card will go ahead but Warwick frozen off

1 day ago
A picture

NFL wildcard weekend predictions: Allen can carry Bills – if he can handle the pressure

1 day ago
A picture

Ashes 2025-26: our writers’ end-of-series England v Australia awards

1 day ago
A picture

Free agent outfielder Max Kepler hit with 80-game ban for positive drug test

2 days ago
A picture

France taps out as G7 summit moved to avoid clash with White House UFC event

2 days ago
A picture

England ruthlessly privatised cricket – Australia embraces it with constant public displays of affection | Emma John

2 days ago