April 24, 2024

BHP Delays $14 Billion Canada Potash Push as Profit Drops

CEO Andrew Mackenzie outlined the low-risk course as he handed down his first results, reporting a 15 percent drop in half-year profit before one-offs, which missed forecasts largely due to Australian mining tax adjustments and other non-operational items.

BHP and Glencore Xstrata wrapped up the results season for the world’s big five miners, with BHP holding up slightly better than its peers as it stepped up output of iron ore, copper, coal and oil and slashed $2.7 billion in costs in the face of sliding commodity prices.

Major miners have come under pressure to rein in spending, sell off underperforming assets and tackle debt after years of rampant spending on new mines and acquisitions as commodity prices soared.

Reflecting the austerity drive, BHP said it plans to invest $2.6 billion over the next four years digging shafts at the Jansen potash project, delaying production at least until 2020 from its original 2015 target, while inviting offers for stakes in the mine.

“The whole basis of the strategy that we’re being clear about today is that we want to retain complete flexibility to enter the market at a timing which we think is right to maximise returns for our shareholders,” Mackenzie told reporters.

BHP put more than $40 billion worth of new projects on ice a year ago to combat costs that had grown out of control over the previous decade as miners raced to feed booming Chinese demand.

Mackenzie reiterated that BHP remains confident in China’s long-term growth prospects, as 250 million people move into cities and the country rebalances its economy toward consumption-led growth.

“In the short to medium term, I think the signs are reasonably positive that they’ll hold to their forecast for 7-8 percent annual growth,” he said.

He outlined a more aggressive cut in capital and exploration spending than recently flagged, with spending to fall 26 percent to $16.2 billion in the 2014 financial year.

Attributable profit excluding one-offs fell to $6.12 billion for the six months to June from $7.18 billion a year ago. That was well below analysts’ forecasts of $7.16 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

BHP increased its final dividend by 2 cents to 59 cents, just short of analysts’ forecasts at 60 cents.

BHP’s shares fell 3.2 percent in early London trade, underperforming a 0.8 percent fall in the FTSE 100 index.

“We believe that the market may be surprised that the group is pushing ahead with its Jansen potash project in Canada,” Investec said in a morning note in London.

POTASH PLANS

BHP has long planned to break into the potash industry, targeting a lucrative new business that has been controlled by two cartels, as developing countries look to grow more food over the next few decades.

It has already invested $1.2 billion in Jansen and the timing of its entry has been closely watched by the world’s major producers, led by Potash Corp of Saskatchewan, which BHP tried to take over in 2010.

Its $39 billion bid was blocked by Canada on fears that potash prices and royalties would drop as BHP planned to split from the North American cartel. Now Russia’s Uralkali has given potash producers a taste of what could happen as it recently quit the Belarusian Potash Co cartel.

Mackenzie said once Jansen’s shafts and infrastructure are in place, the mine would be about three years away from production, but the company would decide on when to begin producing based on the market and its ability to fund further development.

BHP believes the project will generate returns well above the company’s average returns over many decades, he said.

“As long as we get the timing right, we’re not overly aggressive, we think those returns are there,” Mackenzie said.

(Reporting by Sonali Paul; Editing by Richard Pullin)

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2013/08/20/business/20reuters-bhpbilliton-earnings.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Kloppers to Step Down as Chief of BHP Billiton

Mr. Kloppers, 50, will be succeeded by Andrew Mackenzie, the head of BHP’s nonferrous division, on May 10. Mr. Mackenzie, 56, was one of the first people Mr. Kloppers hired when he became chief executive in 2007.

The announcement came as BHP, the world’s largest mining company, reported a 58 percent drop in profit for the six months that ended Dec. 31 compared with the period a year earlier, partly because of lower commodity prices.

Mr. Kloppers is the latest chief executive to leave a big mining company over the last five months. The chief executives of Rio Tinto and Anglo American also stepped down.

Mr. Kloppers said in a statement that the decision to retire was difficult, but that after almost 20 years with BHP Billiton, it was “the right time to pass the leadership baton.”

“I am very proud of the achievements of our company and our people,” he said.

Mr. Mackenzie, who grew up in an industrial town near Glasgow in Scotland, said he planned to continue focusing “on our strategy of owning and safely operating large, low-cost, long-life assets diversified by commodity, geography and market.”

Mr. Kloppers’s departure was widely expected among investors. He came under increasing pressure after some failed acquisition plans, including one to buy Rio Tinto. Last year, Mr. Kloppers gave up his bonus after BHP had to reduce the value of some of its assets, including shale-gas holdings in the United States.

“Despite an exceptionally difficult economic environment during his tenure, Marius and his team have delivered for shareholders, significantly outperforming our peers in terms of total shareholder returns,” BHP’s chairman, Jac Nasser, said in the statement.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/20/business/bhp-billiton-chief-will-step-down.html?partner=rss&emc=rss