Brazil’s Mining Co. Vale Seems to Have Bought Overpriced Rio Tinto

Vale, Brazil's mining company Brazilian mining company Vale do Rio Doce may have paid too much for its purchase of iron-ore and potash assets from Rio Tinto Group, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Banco Santander SA.

Vale, the world's biggest iron-ore producer, agreed last week to buy Rio's Corumbá ore mine in western Brazil for US$ 750 million. That's the equivalent of US$ 229 a metric ton for Corumbá's iron ore and near "peak valuations" of US$ 249 a ton, JPMorgan said, calling the deal better for Rio than Vale.

"We expected to see Vale being able to purchase assets at bargain prices. This doesn't seem to be the case," JPMorgan analyst Rodolfo De Angles wrote in a research note dated January 30. "Any acquisition in iron ore would only make sense at very low valuations."

The Corumbá project, in the heartland of South America, would mean shipping iron ore in barges along the Paraguay and Paraná rivers to the Uruguayan coast, where a specific port was to be built for the transfer of the cargo to sea going vessels.

The sale comes as the world economic slump has caused commodities demand to collapse, forcing mining companies to cut workers and shed assets. Vale do Rio Doce, based in Rio de Janeiro, already has "more competitive" assets in Brazil than the one in Corumbá, Santander analysts wrote this week.

"Vale is buying an asset that it does not really need and one that is not strategic, and is paying top dollar for it," analysts led by Felipe Reis wrote. "This is negative news".

The timing of the deal may also hurt Vale given its recent job losses, Santander said. On December 3, Vale said it fired 1.300 of its 62.000 employees and sent 5.500 more on temporary paid leave, as it cut iron-ore and nickel output. Some of the employees are now returning to their posts or are being transferred, Vale spokesman Fernando Thompson said January 22.

"The political timing of this acquisition is not good," Santander wrote. "The company is laying off people at other mines in Brazil and at the same time spending money on acquisitions, which may create negative sentiment from union leaders and politicians alike."

Vale also is paying 850 million USD for Rio's Potasio Rio Colorado potash project under development in Argentina announced London- based Rio last January 30.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Suzano Papel e Celulose Talks About Growth

Suzano Bahia Sul Papel e Celulose S.A., one of Latin America’s largest integrated pulp ...

Brazil: President Vargas’s Most Enduring Legacy Is His Xenophobic Nationalism

The ideology of nationalism has been Brazil’s most pervasive ideology since the first presidency ...

Brazil Brings to Miami Coffee, Cachaça and All Kinds of Food to Sell the World

On Monday, February 6, the Brazilian Export Promotion Agency (APEX-Brasil) made a presentation to ...

Brazil Invites World to Make Tourism Money in the Northeast

It ends today, May 30, in the northeastern Brazilian state of Pernambuco the Nordeste ...

In Brazil, Dilma Woman Takes Place of Lula Man as President’s Chief of Staff

Gleisi Helena Hoffmann, 45, a Brazilian senator and wife of Brazil’s Communications Minister Paulo ...

Brazil’s Publishing Giant Abril Calls On US’s Accenture to Revamp Customer Service

Brazil’s Grupo Abril, the leading publishing group in Latin America, has selected Accenture to ...

Disunity Rally

President Fernando Henrique Cardoso called the march undemocratic since one of its objectives was ...

Brazilian House Ready to Expel Man Who Denounced Kickback Scheme in Congress

This afternoon the Brazilian Chamber of Deputies is scheduled to vote on a motion ...

Poetry Sorceress

‘Inside me lives/ The peasant/ Grafted to the land,/ A little moody./ Hard worker./ ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`