M&A activity rockets to $25bn in Q1 2018, latest EY report finds

By Dale Benton
The value of mergers and acquisition transactions in the global mining industry saw an increase of more than 80% in the first quarter of 2018, a new rep...

The value of mergers and acquisition transactions in the global mining industry saw an increase of more than 80% in the first quarter of 2018, a new report form EY has found.

Transactions rose to $25bn during 1Q18, representing an 86% year-on-year increase. The biggest contributor for this increase, was the merger between Potash Corp and Agrium, two of the biggest potash operators in the world.

Looking closer at the M&A activities, there has been a shift in the focus of this investment. More companies have turned towards consolidation and strategic acquisitions, moving away from divestments for debt reduction purposes.

But, as potash played a key role in that increase other commodities reflect a different outlook across the world. Investment has stalled a little, with the volume of transactions decreasing by 16% year-on-year.
 

Related stories:

New Century Resources to supply zinc concentrate from Century Mine to Concord Resources

Centerra Gold blocks Chaarat's move for Kumtor gold mine

Mineral-rich South Africa should expand relationship with China amidst slowed demand

Jupiter Mines lists on ASX with "biggest IPO in a decade" of A$240 million

 

EY believes this reflects a “wait-and-see mood” that is prevalent across the industry.

That being said, along with potash and aluminium, gold and coal activity was predominantly “buoyant.” These metals represented around 15% of deals value, with the gold sector in itself seeing around four transactions with a value in excess of $200mn.

“With stronger balance sheets across the sector, miners are increasingly returning to an investment-led strategy, which is driving a renewed focus on building portfolios that deliver sustainable shareholder returns,” said the report. “Inevitably, deals will continue to shift from divestment-led to investment-led with the key drivers being pipeline replenishment, synergistic volume growth and next generation mineral demand. Activist investors, meanwhile, will continue to shape miners’ strategies, affecting the choice of commodity portfolio and volume of ambition.”

 

Share

Featured Articles

EC on Importance of Minerals Security Partnership Forum

The European Commission's communications team explains what the Minerals Security Partnership Forum is, what it will do and why it is so important

EU & US form Critical Minerals Security Partnership Forum

European Union & US government form new forum to secure critical mineral supply chains, boost production, secure ESG standards & promote fair competition

World Gold Council: Gold Miners 'Must Create ESG Value'

John Mulligan is Climate Change Lead at the World Gold Council. Here he discusses the sustainability & ESG challenges facing the gold mining industry

Clean Energy Drive 'Fuelling Tech Adoption in Mining'

Technology

Exyn Technologies to Share 3D Mine Survey Insights

Digital Mining

Green Steel Push 'Needs New Regulations and Incentives'

Sustainability