Sumitomo will buy 30% of unit Mineração Usiminas SA, the Belo Horizonte, Brazil-based steelmaker said in a regulatory filing. The unit will own 83% of railroad operator Usiminas Participação & Logística SA.
Usiminas is seeking to profit from surging iron-ore prices by selling a stake and spinning off the unit, which the company said may be worth 6.43 billion. Cia. Siderúrgica Nacional SA, the Brazilian steelmaker known as CSN, also plans to sell shares in its iron-ore operations.
Usiminas will invest 4.1 billion Reais (2.27 billion USD) by 2015 to boost iron-ore output more than fourfold to 29 million metric tons, Chief Executive Officer Wilson Brumer said Wednesday on a conference call.
“Global iron-ore demand is pretty strong, prompting clients to seek partnerships to secure supplies,” Brumer said. The company doesn’t yet have a timeline for a public share sale in the unit, he said.
Tokyo-based Sumitomo follows other Asian companies buying assets in South America to secure supplies of iron ore, the main raw material used to make steel, as demand in China rises.
A group that included Posco and Nippon Steel Corp. last year acquired a 40% stake in the CSN’s Namisa unit for US$ 3.12 billion.
Sumitomo paid the equivalent of about US$ 247 a ton of iron ore, almost twice as much as Usiminas paid in 2008 to buy mining company Mineração J. Mendes Ltda., Ivan Fadel, a Credit Suisse analyst based in São Paulo, said in a note to clients.
“Financially, we believe this was an excellent deal pulled out by Usiminas management,” Fadel said.
The Usiminas unit owns iron-ore mines in the southeastern Brazilian state of Minas Gerais and the Itaguaí port project in neighboring Rio de Janeiro state.
The railroad business includes a 20% voting stake in MRS Logística SA, a rail operator in southeastern Brazil. Vale SA and CSN also hold stakes in MRS. CSN is seeking to spin off its mining unit to sell shares in an initial public offering to finance expansion.
The spin-off includes iron-ore mine Casa de Pedra, 60% of the Namisa mine, its stake in MRS and an iron-ore port project in Brazil.