Saturday, March 31, 2012

Reuters: Deals: Huawei Australia chief eyes bidding on other broadband contracts

Reuters: Deals
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Huawei Australia chief eyes bidding on other broadband contracts
Apr 1st 2012, 00:33

SYDNEY | Sat Mar 31, 2012 8:33pm EDT

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Chinese telecom equipment firm Huawei Technologies Co Ltd Australia Chairman John Lord said on Sunday that there are still parts of Australia's $38 billion national broadband network (NBN) the company wants to bid for despite a government ban.

Australia has blocked Huawei HWT.UL from tendering for contracts in Australia's $38 billion high-speed broadband network (NBN) due to undefined security concerns.

But Lord said in a television interview said he still believes portions of Australia's telecommunications infrastructure should be open to research and technology from outside sources and the company will push ahead for that business.

"Our argument will always be that there is core parts of the national infrastructure that companies like us would not expect to be in," Lord said in an interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

"We would still argue that there are parts of the NBN that are perhaps suitable."

The ban has prompted comment from Australia's largest trading partner, China. After news of Huawei's ban broke last week, China's Foreign Ministry called on the Australian government to provide fair market access for Chinese companies.

Huawei has made a submission to Prime Minister Julia Gillard's strategy paper on "Australia in the Asian Century" that argues for bringing technologies into Australia from some "not so traditional sources," Lord told the ABC.

Lord said he hoped that the decision to exclude Huawei from tendering for Australia's NBN was based on national interest and not based on the fact that it was Huawei or a Chinese company.

Huawei started its Australian operations in 2004 and has expanded its business across Australia, New Zealand and the South Pacific.

The company was founded by its CEO Ren Zhengfei, a former officer of the People's Liberation Army in China, a fact that has fuelled the claim that it has a cozy relationship with the Chinese government - a claim denied by the company.

The Shenzhen-based firm, like cross-town rival ZTE Corp (000063.SZ), has been struggling to expand in the United States, which blocked its telecom equipment deals due to national security concerns and allegations it violated sanctions by supplying Iran with censorship equipment.

(Writing by Morag MacKinnon, with additional reporting by Maggie Lu-Yue Yang; Editing by Ed Lane)

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Reuters: Deals: Argentina decides to control oil firm YPF: report

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Argentina decides to control oil firm YPF: report
Mar 31st 2012, 12:15

BUENOS AIRES | Sat Mar 31, 2012 8:15am EDT

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Argentina's government has made the decision to take control of leading energy company YPF and is discussing whether to renationalize it or intervene in its administration, a newspaper reported on Saturday.

YPF (YPFD.BA), which is controlled by Spain's Repsol (REP.MC), is under intense pressure from the center-left government to boost output to reduce surging fuel imports that are eroding the country's trade surplus.

Pagina 12 newspaper, which is seen as reflecting government thinking, said President Cristina Fernandez had made up her mind on the need for state control and that internal debate was now focused on how to go about it.

It gave the possible options as expropriation or state intervention including the purchase of company shares.

To reduce the risk of legal challenges, any such move would be preceded by the passing of a law declaring oil and natural gas production as matters of public interest, the newspaper said.

"There's no going backward on this," it quoted unnamed government sources as saying. "Repsol has an extractive model for YPF that doesn't work for us. Company rationale doesn't contemplate the reinvestment of profits and putting capital into exploration and production based on what the country needs."

YPF's stock has been battered by weeks of speculation about a possible renationalization and a series of sanctions by national and provincial authorities, such as the withdrawal of operating licenses.

YPF officials have defended the company's investment record and criticized provinces for revoking its concessions.

It says its investment in Argentina rose 50 percent in 2011, with most of the cash channeled into upstream including exploration projects like those that led to the huge Vaca Muerta shale find, which could potentially double Argentina's energy output.

(Reporting By Helen Popper; Editing by Philip Barbara)

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Reuters: Deals: Saudi Electricity signs $1.4 billion loan agreement

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Saudi Electricity signs $1.4 billion loan agreement
Mar 31st 2012, 08:30

Sat Mar 31, 2012 4:30am EDT

(Reuters) - Saudi Electricity Co 5110.SE has signed a $1.4 billion loan agreement with international banks to finance the construction of a new power plant, it said in a statement posted in Arabic on the Saudi bourse website on Saturday.

The loan, which will be repaid over 15 years, was made by a group of international banks led by HSBC (HSBA.L) and also including Bank of Tokyo Mitusbishi, Sumitomo-Mitsui Banking Corporation, Bank Mizuho and a bank identified as German Development Bank for International Export Projects, said the statement in Arabic.

The loan is backed by guarantees from Korean export credit agencies Korea Trade Insurance Corporation (K-Sure) and Export-Import Bank of Korea KEXIM.UL.

The power plant is being constructed by a consortium led by Korea's Doosan Heavy Industries and Construction Companies (034020.KS).

Earlier this month, Saudi Electricity priced a $1.75 billion two-part Islamic bond -- the kingdom's first dollar-denominated issue since October 2010, when petrochemicals group Saudi Basic Industries Corp (SABIC) launched a $1 billion five-year bond.

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Reuters: Deals: Dubai's Drydocks says most lenders agree on $2.2 billion debt deal

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Dubai's Drydocks says most lenders agree on $2.2 billion debt deal
Mar 31st 2012, 06:44

DUBAI | Sat Mar 31, 2012 2:44am EDT

DUBAI (Reuters) - Dubai's ship building unit Drydocks World has secured the necessary level of support from its syndicated lenders to implement the restructuring of its $2.2 billion debt, the company said in a statement on Saturday.

The Dubai World DBWLD.UL unit said a "significant majority" of the Group's lenders had formally confirmed their support for the restructuring. However, a small minority is yet to confirm support, it added.

The company did not specify what percentage of lenders needed to agree for it to go ahead with the restructuring proposal.

"The Group remains confident the absence of support from this minority will have no impact on the group's restructuring," said the chairman of Drydocks World Khamis Juma Buamim in the statement.

It said last week that it hoped to secure lenders support by April 2.

Drydocks World has been in negotiations to restructure its loan facility in an effort to put an end to lengthy and complex debt talks.

Earlier this month, the company proposed repaying creditors in five years and said it was seeking more working capital.

Drydocks World's debt restructuring, initially expected to be completed by April last year, has dragged on as the presence of hedge funds and a lack of government support curbed prospects of an amicable deal.

A U.S.-based hedge fund Monarch Alternative Capital won a $45.5 million legal claim against Drydocks this month for defaulting on a loan, putting the ship builder's restructuring in further trouble.

The firm's debts stem from a multibillion-dollar loan it took out to fund expansion in Singapore. Its major ship and rig building facilities are in southeast Asian countries such as Singapore and Indonesia.

(Reporting by Praveen Menon)

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Friday, March 30, 2012

Reuters: Deals: Brazil's Camargo launches bid for Cimpor

Reuters: Deals
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Brazil's Camargo launches bid for Cimpor
Mar 30th 2012, 23:33

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A car drives into a tunnel constructed by Camargo Correa in Sao Paulo January 8, 2010. REUTERS/Paulo Whitaker

A car drives into a tunnel constructed by Camargo Correa in Sao Paulo January 8, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Paulo Whitaker

LISBON | Fri Mar 30, 2012 7:33pm EDT

LISBON (Reuters) - Camargo Correa, Brazil's second-largest construction group, launched a bid on Friday for the 68.1 percent it still does not own of Portuguese cement producer Cimpor (CPR.LS), according to a securities filling.

São Paulo-based Camargo, whose Brazil-based cement unit is the nation's fifth-biggest, controls 32.9 percent of Cimpor.

A Cimpor spokesman in Lisbon said the company had no comment.

Camargo Correa might be taking advantage of depressed valuations in the troubled Portuguese economy to win control of the cement producer, which also has the fourth spot in Brazil's cement market. In 2010, Camargo Correa teamed up with industrial conglomerate Grupo Votorantim VOTOR.UL to thwart Brazilian steelmaker CSN's (CSNA3.SA) bid for full control of Cimpor.

Votorantim will analyze the proposal by Camargo, according to a securities filling.

Votorantim is the largest producer of cement in Brazil, followed by Holcim, France's Lafarge (LAFP.PA) and Cimpor, according to figures by SNIC.

Camargo Correa, Votorantim and four other rivals colluded to fix prices, hampering competition in the Brazilian cement market in the midst of a construction boom, an antitrust body said last November.

Portuguese media reported at the end of last year that both Camargo Correa and Votorantim were preparing to buy Cimpor minority shareholders out. Votorantim holds 21 percent of the Portuguese company.

Cimpor shares closed 1.44 percent higher at 5 euros per share on Friday.

(Reporting by Sergio Gonçalves and Axel Bugge; additional reporting by Alberto Alerigi Jr., Guillermo Parra-Bernal and Fabio Couto; editing by Greg Mahlich, Gary Hill and Andre Grenon)

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Reuters: Deals: Burger King to incur charge on Carrols deal

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Burger King to incur charge on Carrols deal
Mar 30th 2012, 21:26

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Analysis & Opinion

Burger King signs at a restaurant in Annandale, VA, August 24, 2010. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

Burger King signs at a restaurant in Annandale, VA, August 24, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

Fri Mar 30, 2012 5:26pm EDT

(Reuters) - Burger King Corp BKCBK.UL said it will take an impairment charge as a result of its previously announced sale of 278 of its outlets to Carrols Restaurant Group Inc (TAST.O).

Last week, Carrols agreed to buy the Burger King restaurants in a cash-and-stock deal that will make it the biggest Burger King franchisee in the world.

Burger King, now the third-largest U.S. hamburger chain, also said it is evaluating the accounting implications of the sale and is unable to estimate the amount or the range of amount of the charge the company might take. (Reporting by Meenakshi Iyer in Bangalore; Editing by Viraj Nair)

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Reuters: Deals: RLPC-Eni in talks for 12 billion euro demerger loan

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RLPC-Eni in talks for 12 billion euro demerger loan
Mar 30th 2012, 17:42

By Alasdair Reilly and Tessa Walsh

LONDON | Fri Mar 30, 2012 1:42pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Italian oil and gas group Eni (ENI.MI) is talking to banks about a 12 billion euro ($16 billion) bridging loan to back the proposed demerger of gas grid operator Snam (SRG.MI), banking sources said on Friday.

The jumbo bridge loan will refinance shareholder loans from Eni to Snam in a move designed to clean up Eni's balance sheet, the bankers said. The bridge loan will then be refinanced by bonds issued by Snam, they added.

Eni declined to comment.

"Eni has already funded the deal. Banks will be taking it off Eni's balance sheet and it will be refinanced by bonds," a senior banker said.

The large size of the loan would be difficult for any borrower in a shrinking loan market hit by bank deleveraging, but is particularly challenging as the largest deal for a peripheral borrower.

"This deal is big not only for Italy but for anywhere. If it happens, this will be the biggest thing to come out of southern Europe this year," another senior banker said.

Banks have limited credit availability for peripheral countries but may be prepared to make an exception for Eni as loan volume languishes at 10-year lows and deal flow at 2000 levels.

Credit approval would have to be sought at the highest levels in banks for a deal of this size.

Lenders may also be able to take advantage of positive momentum generated by recent successful loans for Italy's Enel (ENEI.MI) and Spain's Telefonica (TEF.MC), totaling 3 billion euros and 3.4 billion pounds ($5.4 billion) respectively.

Telecom Italia (TLIT.MI) is also making progress on its 4 billion euro loan refinancing.

HIGH MARGINS

The combination of high margins - 300bp for Enel, up to 250bp for Telefonica and 215bp for Telecom Italia - and the ability to use the loans as collateral to raise financing from the European Central Bank is making banks look more kindly at loans for top peripheral companies.

However, while companies such as Enel have significant amounts of ancillary business to offer, Snam has a mainly domestic profile and has only bond business, which may not be enough to feed a large bank group.

The success of the deal hinges on the bond market's view of the transaction. Banks will likely be willing to underwrite a large loan deal only if there is a quick bond market takeout or refinancing.

The success of the deal hinges on the debt capital market's view of Italian corporate bonds. Banks will be happy to bridge as long as there's a takeout.

"Banks will not want to be long on an Italian corporate with little ancillary business," a banker said.

Eni, which owns a 53 percent stake in Snam that is worth around 7 billion euros, plans to exit the company by September 2013 as part of its 2012-2015 strategy plan.

The demerger will be regulated through a government decree to be issued by the end of May.

Snam has 11.2 billion euros of net debt, while Eni has 9.9 billion euros. Eni said that Snam has relatively low leverage compared to its regulated peers, but is relatively high compared with Eni's core oil and gas activities.

Snam said that it had already begun the process of gaining direct access to capital markets by the end of the year in order to refinance its debt. ($1=0.7509 euros) ($1 = 0.6259 British pounds)

(Editing by Greg Mahlich and David Holmes)

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Reuters: Deals: Sino-Forest seeks approval for sale or restructure

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Sino-Forest seeks approval for sale or restructure
Mar 30th 2012, 17:07

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The company logo of Sino-Forest is displayed at the entrance of its office in Hong Kong June 8, 2011. REUTERS/Xavier Ng

The company logo of Sino-Forest is displayed at the entrance of its office in Hong Kong June 8, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Xavier Ng

Fri Mar 30, 2012 1:07pm EDT

(Reuters) - Sino-Forest Corp (TRE.TO) has asked a Canadian bankruptcy court to approve an agreement providing for either the sale of the embattled Chinese forestry company to a third party, or a restructuring enabling note holders to acquire nearly all of its assets.

The Toronto-listed company, whose stock fell more than 70 percent after a short-seller accused it of exaggerating its assets in June, said on Friday it would ask the Ontario Superior Court of Justice to approve the agreement. Regulators stopped trading in the stock in August and it has yet to resume.

Sino-Forest said in a statement that holders of about 40 percent of the aggregate principal amount of its notes have agreed to support the plan.

The company said it was also taking legal action against the Carson Block, the short-seller's firm Muddy Waters, and others, seeking more than $4 billion in damages.

"We believe the full value of our assets will only be achieved if we are able to continue operating the business," Judson Martin, chief executive of Sino-Forest, said in the release.

It said a restructuring under Canada's Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act, the equivalent of U.S. Chapter 11 filing, was the best way to secure the business's future.

(Reporting by Allison Martell and Jennifer Kwan; Editing by Frank McGurty)

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Reuters: Deals: Galaxy to buy Canada's Lithium One for C$109 million

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Galaxy to buy Canada's Lithium One for C$109 million
Mar 30th 2012, 13:33

Fri Mar 30, 2012 9:33am EDT

(Reuters) - Galaxy Resources (GXY.AX) said on Friday it will take over Canada's Lithium One (LI.V) in a friendly, C$109 million ($109.10 million) deal that will enable the Australian miner to expand its global resources and become a top player in the lithium.

Lithium One shareholders will receive 1.8 Galaxy shares per common share in an all-share deal that values Canadian miner at about C$1.55 per share.

With global demand for lithium growing in the battery industry, the goal is to build the largest pure-play producer in the world, said Galaxy's managing director Iggy Tan.

"Once you get to that level, you are really on the radar to some of the bigger institutions," he said.

Lithium batteries have taken off in recent years on the proliferation of consumer electronics like tablet computers and smartphones, along with electric and hybrid vehicles.

Galaxy owns the Mt. Cattlin hardrock lithium mine in Australia and a lithium carbonate processing plant in China. The company, which has the capacity of produce 17,000 metric tons a year, has off-take agreements with Japan's Mitsubishi Corp (8058.T) and battery makers in China.

Lithium One owns the James Bay hardrock project in Quebec, in which Galaxy already holds a 20 percent stake, along with the promising Sal de Vida brine project in Argentina.

"We are interested in the brine lithium side because it also produces a lot of potash," said Tan. "Potash is an excellent by-product, it is used in agriculture and there is high demand."

The boards of both companies have backed the deal.

Shares of Lithium One closed at C$1.29 on Thursday on the TSX Venture Exchange before the deal was announced, while Galaxy closed at A$0.885 on Friday on the Australian Stock Exchange.

Lithium One's shares were halted ahead of market open on Friday morning. ($1 = 0.9991 Canadian dollars)

(Reporting by Julie Gordon; Editing by Frank McGurty)

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Reuters: Deals: Atlantia says interest strong in Chilean sale

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Atlantia says interest strong in Chilean sale
Mar 30th 2012, 12:48

CERNOBBIO, Italy | Fri Mar 30, 2012 8:48am EDT

CERNOBBIO, Italy (Reuters) - Italian road operator Atlantia (ATL.MI) said on Friday its plan to sell a stake of up to 49 percent in its Chilean unit Grupo Costanera has attracted strong interest but no formal bids as yet.

Earlier Atlantia's chairman Fabio Cerchiai said Grupo Costanera had received more than 10 offers.

"The company confirms there is a strong spontaneous interest from several institutional investors for those assets but at the moment this has not translated into any formal offer," the Rome-based company said in a statement.

In February, Atlantia agreed to buy the remaining 54.2 percent of the Grupo Costanera holding company for 670 million euros ($890 million).

In other comments on Friday, Cerchiai said he expected traffic on the group's Italian road toll network to have fallen 10 percent in the first quarter, in line with the first two months of 2011, dragged down by exceptionally bad weather.

At 1210 GMT Atlantia shares were up 1.6 percent while the Italian blue-chip index .FTMIB was up 0.77 percent. ($1 = 0.7532 euros)

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Reuters: Deals: Xstrata, Tohoku set April coal contract around $115/metric tonne

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Xstrata, Tohoku set April coal contract around $115/metric tonne
Mar 30th 2012, 11:59

PERTH/TOKYO | Fri Mar 30, 2012 7:59am EDT

PERTH/TOKYO (Reuters) - Xstrata Plc (XTA.L) and Tohoku Electric Power Co (9506.T) have settled the first Japanese annual coal import contract for the fiscal year beginning April 1 slightly above $115 per metric tonne, sources told Reuters on Friday, a level which will likely be followed by Japan's other utilities.

Market sources reported the contract was settled between $115.20 and $115.25 per tonne. Japan's annual April contract is often used as the yearly benchmark for Asia.

"Tohoku Electric Power (9506.T) is seen as the champion negotiator, and based on that, other companies decide whether to buy," a source at a major Japanese energy firm said.

The negotiations are held between a lead Japanese utility, in this case Tohoku, which negotiates on behalf of other Japanese utilities.

The settlement price is often just a few dollars above Australian coal spot prices, but this year the settlement price is more than $8 per tonne, or more than 7 percent, above the Australian Newcastle coal index price of $107.01 per tonne.

Talks often drag out for weeks and were especially drawn out this year as producers held out for $120 per tonne, a price well above spot levels. Tohoku countered with around $110 per tonne or lower.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Japan thermal coal and LNG suppliers:

link.reuters.com/tyw58r

Graphic- Australia thermal coal exports by destination:

link.reuters.com/hak26r

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Friday was the end of Japan's fiscal year and although coal deliveries would have continued on a provisional basis even if an agreement had not been met, some suggested that Japanese utilities may have been more willing to compromise to secure supply.

Japan is heading into its peak summer power season with just one of its 54 nuclear reactors online due to safety fears after the Fukushima crisis.

Its gas import capacity is also reaching its upper limits, meaning the power sector will increasingly depend on coal to fill the nuclear power gap.

"They need to lock in supplies and have certainty," one Australian market source said.

"With most of the nuclear units out, they need to make sure their coal-fired stations don't have a problem," the source added.

Japan's nuclear reactors had previously supplied about 30 percent of the nation's power needs.

Part of the premium to spot prices can also be attributed to the higher quality of coal demanded by Japanese utilities.

"(The price) seems to take into account the premium to the current spot price to take into account the quality difference," the Japanese energy firm source said.

(Reporting by Rebekah Kebede in Perth and Osamu Tsukimori in Tokyo; editing by Jason Neely)

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Reuters: Deals: African Barrick Gold sees deal options in 2012

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African Barrick Gold sees deal options in 2012
Mar 30th 2012, 10:44

Greg Hawkins, President and CEO of African Barrick Gold, speaks during the Reuters Global Mining and Steel Summit, in London March 21, 2011. REUTERS/Benjamin Beavan

Greg Hawkins, President and CEO of African Barrick Gold, speaks during the Reuters Global Mining and Steel Summit, in London March 21, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Benjamin Beavan

By Clara Ferreira-Marques and Eric Onstad

LONDON | Fri Mar 30, 2012 6:44am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - African Barrick Gold (ABG) ABG.L sees increased opportunities for deals in Africa as asset prices ease and potential sellers begin to consider their options in the face of a still-uncertain economic outlook, the mining company said on Tuesday.

ABG, a unit of the world's largest gold producer, Barrick Gold (ABX.TO), is keen to diversify its asset base beyond its current Tanzanian focus, most likely through acquisition.

Prices in 2011, however, were too high for the miner to close what it calls the "valuation gap", with gold at record levels and the price of many commodities at post-crisis peaks.

Chief Executive Greg Hawkins, speaking at the Reuters Mining and Metals Summit on Tuesday, said the miner had looked at some 25 projects across Africa and signed at least 10 confidentiality agreements in the last 18 months - and was finally seeing the prospects for a deal improve.

"When we were looking a year ago, we thought the valuations were too steep... Now most of (the assets) we looked at a year ago are about half the price from where they were," Hawkins said at Reuters' office in London.

"That's brought a lot more things that we like much more into range... I think that landscape has improved dramatically in the last year with the pricing change."

Gold is widely expected to be a focus for merger and acquisition activity in 2012, as corporate cash piles run high and gold producers' valuations are close to historic lows.

Hawkins said the group was looking at assets from exploration through to the production stage across west and northeast Africa, including potential future producers in the Nubian Shield, a region stretching through Eritrea and Sudan.

Another difference from 2011, he added, was asset owners were also becoming more amenable to a sale, as share prices come off last year's levels and financing conditions remain tough.

"Probably a year ago we were knocking on doors, people's share prices were quite high, they were pretty relaxed. A year down the track, maybe they're running out of cash, the share price has halved," he said.

"We've seen in the last three months a lot more inward traffic to us, people talking to us about whether we're interested in taking a stake or a joint venture."

African Barrick had a tough 2011, hit by power outages that held back production at its key Buzwagi mine in Tanzania and the miner has set its target for the year at a modest 675,000 to 725,000 ounces. That means it is unlikely to hit a target set at the time of its IPO of 1 million ounces by 2014, without deals.

But many investors say ABG has to balance resolving its current production issues, power, or community and security concerns at its North Mara mine, for example, with the need to add ounces and diversify its geographical risk.

Hawkins said parent Barrick, however, was supportive of the miner's aim to grow through deals.

"Everybody's cautious, realizing the scrutiny you're going to put yourself under when you go and do that," Hawkins said.

"There is always that question of whether you should get your own house in order... The reality is in Africa you are always going to have issues that come up. They are happy enough that we are getting through them and they do see the long-term strategic rationale in doing something."

(Editing by Jane Merriman)

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Reuters: Deals: SK hynix in initial Elpida bid; Micron, Toshiba circling

Reuters: Deals
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
SK hynix in initial Elpida bid; Micron, Toshiba circling
Mar 30th 2012, 10:26

By Maki Shiraki and Miyoung Kim

TOKYO/SEOUL | Fri Mar 30, 2012 6:26am EDT

TOKYO/SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea's SK hynix (000660.KS) said on Friday it has made a preliminary bid for Japan's Elpida Memory, while sources said U.S.-based Micron Technology (MU.O) also plans to enter the fray for taking over the bankrupt memory chipmaker.

With sources saying Toshiba Corp (6502.T) too is considering bidding for Elpida, a three-way contest is looming for the Japanese company which last month made the nation's biggest ever bankruptcy filing by a manufacturer after failing to secure a rescue from other chipmakers.

SK hynix said it had submitted its initial interest for the bid on Friday, the first deadline for a bid proposal, adding it would decide whether to make a formal bid after conducting due diligence.

Several sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters that Toshiba was considering joining the bidding to take on Samsung Electronics Co (005930.KS), the world's top maker of DRAMs, but that it was reluctant to take on all of Elpida's assets.

Toshiba may consider a joint bid with another company, they said, in a move that would make it easier to gain government-backed funding and help cushion the risk. Toshiba wants to avoid exposing itself further to the fluctuations and capital spending requirements of the chip market.

Meanwhile, sources told Reuters that Micron plans to submit a bid, and that Goldman Sachs (GS.N) is acting as its financial adviser.

Japan's Nikkei daily had initially reported that Toshiba had decided to join the bidding. Toshiba declined to confirm the report, while Micron could not be immediately reached for comment.

Toshiba believes that adding Elpida's cell-phone-use DRAMs to its offerings is crucial for its survival in the chip industry, and may seek financial assistance from the government-backed Enterprise Turnaround Initiative Corp of Japan, the Nikkei said.

TOSHIBA EDGE SEEN

SK hynix's shares ended down 4.1 percent on Friday in a flat Korean market before its announcement.

"I think news that Toshiba is in the bidding was adding more pressure to falling shares in Hynix," said Daewoo Securities analyst James Song. "If Hynix takes over Elpida on the cheap, nothing will be better than this because it takes out a potential competitor."

Song added, however, that he believed Toshiba was more likely to win because the government is said to prefer a Japanese company to be Elpida's sponsor.

Elpida filed for protection from creditors last month with 448 billion yen ($5.45 billion) in debt.

It will soon stop accepting applications for the first round of bidding, the Nikkei newspaper said. After the second round at the end of April, a single sponsor will be selected in early May, the paper added.

Though other firms such as Intel Corp (INTC.O) and Taiwan's Formosa Plastics Group - the parent of Nanya Technology Corp (2408.TW) - may join the fray, Toshiba and Micron are likely to become leading contenders, the business daily said.

The Korean company's move comes just after it officially launched as SK hynix this week following a takeover of a majority stake in Hynix by cash-rich SK Telecom Co (017670.KS). Hynix's chief executive said earlier this month the company was not interested in Elpida.

Toshiba shares ended down 1.9 percent, underperforming a 0.4 percent decline in the broader Tokyo market.

($1 = 82.2550 Japanese yen)

(Additional reporting by Ju-min Park, Mayumi Negishi, James Topham and Taro Fuse; Writing by Chang-Ran Kim; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman and Himani Sarkar)

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Reuters: Deals: DBS in talks to buy Temasek stake in Indonesia's Danamon: sources

Reuters: Deals
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
DBS in talks to buy Temasek stake in Indonesia's Danamon: sources
Mar 30th 2012, 10:53

SINGAPORE/JAKARTA | Fri Mar 30, 2012 6:27am EDT

SINGAPORE/JAKARTA (Reuters) - DBS Group (DBSM.SI), Southeast Asia's biggest lender, is making a bid for a controlling stake in Indonesia's Bank Danamon (BDMN.JK) worth about $3.2 billion and owned by an arm of Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings TEM.UL, sources said on Friday.

Fullerton Financial Holdings, the Temasek unit, confirmed it had received an offer for its 68 percent stake in Danamon, but did not elaborate on the name of the bidder in a statement.

Sources told Reuters the offer came from DBS, which is also 29 percent owned by Temasek. The sources declined to be identified because the talks were not public.

DBS declined to comment.

Danamon said earlier on Friday that its controlling shareholder Asia Financial, controlled by Temasek, received an offer from an investor to sell the stake, and requested a trading halt until April 2 because of "the transaction plan".

Danamon CEO Henry Ho told Reuters last year that in any acquisition for the lender, it would be valued at no less than 3.5 times book value.

The 68 percent stake was valued at around $3.2 billion based on Danamon's last traded price.

(Reporting by Saeed Azhar and Kevin Lim in SINGAPORE and by Janeman Latul in JAKARTA; Editing by Neil Chatterjee)

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Reuters: Deals: Asahi closing in on $3 billion StarBev deal: sources

Reuters: Deals
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Asahi closing in on $3 billion StarBev deal: sources
Mar 30th 2012, 10:54

By Emi Emoto and David Jones

TOKYO/LONDON | Fri Mar 30, 2012 6:54am EDT

TOKYO/LONDON (Reuters) - Japanese brewer Asahi (2502.T) is working to finalise the purchase of eastern European brewer StarBev from private equity owner CVC Capital Partners CVC.UL in a deal likely to be worth around $3 billion, said people familiar with the matter.

The two were hammering out the final details of a deal which could be announced as early as next week after Asahi was left as the only bidder in the race, but the people said that the deadline was flexible and matters could still change.

"Asahi and CVC are putting the finishing touches to a deal," said one source with knowledge of the deal on Friday.

Earlier this month, Reuters reported that Asahi was seen as a frontrunner in the auction to buy StarBev.

The private equity group, which bought StarBev in December 2009, put the business up for sale after approaches from a number of brewers thought to include Asahi, Carlsberg (CARLb.CO), SABMiller (SAB.L) and Heineken (HEIN.AS).

CVC had bought the business from the world's biggest brewer Anheuser-Busch InBev (ABI.BR), calling it StarBev after its Czech beer Staropramen, and although AB InBev has the "right of first offer", at least two sources with knowledge of the deal said that AB InBev is not going to buy back the assets.

The business has operations in nine eastern European nations including the Czech Republic, Romania, Bulgaria and Hungary and although its has been hit by recent weakness in eastern European economies, it is still seen as a long-term growth story in a rapidly consolidating brewing world.

All parties involved either declined to comment or could not be immediately be reached for comment.

(Editing by Victoria Howley and Mike Nesbit)

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