Showing posts with label general news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label general news. Show all posts

Billionaire Palmer Seeks Hong Kong Listing This Year

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Clive Palmer, Australia’s fifth- richest man, expects to complete an initial public offering of his Resourcefulness mining group in HongKong by the end of the year to benefit from demand for resources in China.

There is a big need in China for growth for resources,” Palmer said today in a phone interview from Perth. He said he’s still deciding what mining assets the IPO will include, and wouldn’t give a value.
Palmer, planning a A$7.5 billion ($6.5 billion) coal project and an iron ore mine, is seeking to take advantage of surging interest in IPOs in Hong Kong, on target for its busiest month for such shares sales since 2007. He may sell between $2 billion and $3 billion in shares, the South China Morning Post reported today, citing people it didn’t identify.
“It’s still a very, very big lick, it would need a lot of interest from China and Hong Kong to get behind it,” said Peter Arden, a Melbourne-based analyst at Ord Minnett Ltd., an affiliate of JPMorgan Chase & Co. “The window for IPOs is opening.”
Australasian Resources Ltd., 66 percent owned by Palmer, advanced 4.4 percent to 47 cents at the 4:10 p.m. Sydney time close on the Australian stock exchange. The stock has risen 27 percent this year.
Soccer Club
Palmer, chairman of the closely held coal and iron ore company Mineralogy Pty., was the only person in the top-10 of Business Review Weekly Magazine’s annual rich 200 list whose wealth increased last year. Palmer’s fortune more than doubled to A$3.4 billion, according to the list that was published in May. He also owns the Gold Coast United soccer club.
China’s industrial production grew at a faster pace than forecast in August and new lending unexpectedly accelerated, indicating a strengthening recovery in the world’s third-biggest economy. Urban fixed-asset investment for the eight months to Aug. 31 climbed 33 percent, the statistics bureau said today.
“One thing that is clear is the Chinese are planning to move another 350 million people to the cities from rural areas and that is going to increase demand for commodities,” Palmer said.
Resourcehouse may include Queensland coal assets held by Palmer and joint venture partner state-owned China Metallurgical Group Corp., Palmer said. It’s unlikely to include the iron ore operations Palmer controls in Western Australia or the Yabulu nickel refinery he bought from BHP Billiton Ltd. in July.
Talks between Australasian and Chinese partner Shougang Corp. for financing of Palmer’s proposed A$2.7 billion iron ore project in Western Australia had not been successful, Perth- based Australasian said in July.
UBS, Macquarie
Funds from the proposed IPO, being managed by UBS AG and Macquarie Group Ltd., will be used to develop resources, he said.
Waratah Coal Inc., the joint venture that owns the coal projects in Queensland and is chaired by Palmer, signed an agreement in May with China Metallurgical to get funding for up to 70 percent of the project. Waratah will fund the remaining 30 percent, Palmer said then. Mineralogy bought Waratah last year for C$85.8 million ($80 million).
Palmer planned a A$5 billion IPO of his company Resource Development International Ltd., owner of iron ore, steel, nickel and energy assets, in July last year, aiming to be dual listed in Hong Kong and Australia. The proposal was shelved after an unsuccessful exploration campaign, he said today.
“The worry I see is that it’s possibly a bit early and my sense of what he’s trying to do, and it’s not a criticism of him, A$5 billion was a very big ask last time,” said Minnett’s Arden. “That’s where he ran into trouble.”

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Massey Energy CEO explosion climate bill

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

The government in the rally industry
The chief executive's biggest coal mine blasted supporters of Massey Energy climate change legislation and environmental issues that affect other coal industry in a free Labor Day concert and the campaign in southern West Virginia.

CEO Don Blankenship said he wanted to show people on the show how the government regulations that hurt the coal industry, raise energy prices and make the country less competitive.

"We hope that through their network that will educate their neighbors and that they all be begging to talk," said Blankenship. "We think that will make a difference."
Richmond, Va.-based Massey, which operates mines in West Virginia, Kentucky and Virginia, is the lead sponsor of the rally, which Blankenship said cost about $1 million to stage.

Organizers had predicted the event, headlined by country star Hank Williams Jr., could draw as many as 100,000 people to a reclaimed Logan County strip mine. An attendance estimate was expected in the afternoon, but the morning crowd appeared to be smaller.

Headlining the event were Fox News personality Sean Hannity and Williams, while rocker Ted Nugent served as master of ceremonies and played briefly.

"Today's the day when the American worker takes back this country," Nugent said.

Some came to support coal mining, while others were more interested in the music.

"This is like the backbone of this area, I mean whether you're a miner or not," said Joe Walters, an electrician who drove an hour from Kentucky.

Miner Dennis Blankenship, no relation to Don Blankenship, drove from southwestern Virginia to show support for mining.

"The industry is being attacked by the Obama administration," said Dennis Blankenship. "We don't mine coal, we don't live."

Hurricane resident Walter Neal came toting signs opposing climate-change legislation because it would increase energy prices and force more U.S. jobs overseas.

"It's cap and tax," Neal said. "What concerns us is China and India further gaining the advantage."

Others were less politically motivated.

Chapmanville resident Roger Dalton said he came mostly for the music. So, too, did Jason Bolling.

"More or less for the coal miners, plus the show," said Bolling, who works at a Massey mine in eastern Kentucky.

For Massey, however, the event was an opportunity for Blankenship to highlight what he calls attacks on American workers.

"Let's send the message to Washington that the politicians have to stop giving our jobs away. If they don't, it's the politicians that need to retrain and relocate," he said.

"We don't need a government that wants to shut down our coal mines. We don't want a government that wants to increase our power bills. ... We don't want a government that is run by people who believe they can change the earth's temperature when they can't balance a budget."
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