Glencore reinstates dividend ahead of Glasenberg exit
Glencore reinstated its dividend and flagged possible further payouts on the back of strong commodity prices as billionaire Chief Executive Ivan Glasenberg prepares to hand over the reins of the trading and mining giant.
Having scrapped its dividend in August after a
pandemic-driven first-half loss, Glencore recommended a distribution of $0.12
per share for 2021, representing a bigger than expected total payout of $1.6
billion.
Shares in the company jumped 2.8% to 291 pence by 0950 GMT,
making it the biggest gainer in an index of its peers in London.
Though much smaller than the $2.6 billion announced last
year before the dividend was cancelled, the payout exceeds consensus market
expectations of $1.3 billion and echoed the bumper dividend at mining giant BHP
Group.
BHP on Tuesday declared a record interim dividend, citing
strong iron ore demand from China..
Glencore, one of the world’s biggest commodity traders,
could top up the dividend or launch a share buyback after it cuts net debt
below $13 billion and if commodity prices stay strong, finance chief Steve
Kamlin said after the company reported 2020 results.
“It does provide potential capacity, come August or
certainly the end of the year, for us to start thinking about a top-up
distribution or buyback,” he told reporters.
TRADING STRENGTH
Glencore’s trading business benefited from strong metals
markets, particularly copper, nickel and zinc. It was also boosted by the
storing of oil when crude prices plunged early last year, selling it later at
higher prices and profiting from what is known as a contango market structure.
“Navigating from recessionary conditions in the first half
to a strong price recovery for most commodities in the second, adjusted EBITDA
finished the year flat at $11.6 billion,” said CEO Glasenberg, who is leaving
Glencore and will be handing over to Gary Nagle in the first half of this year.
Full-year adjusted earnings before interest, tax,
depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) beat the $10.7 billion expected in a
poll of 12 analysts compiled by Vuma, while marketing earnings before interest
and tax (EBIT) jumped 41% to $3.3 billion.
The trading division had its best year since 2008, buoyed by
extreme volatility in the oil market because of coronavirus lockdowns and a
challenging cobalt market.
Net debt fell to $15.8 billion in 2020 from $17.6 billion in
2019, helped by strong second-half cash flows. This was within its target range
and beat market expectations.
“The balance sheet is in a stronger position now,” said
Glasenberg, adding that the miner aims to lower net debt further this year.
Glencore’s net debt is the largest among its peers, partly
because of its trading business.
The group booked a mainly non-cash impairment charge of $5.9
billion largely against its Mopani mine in Zambia and Colombian coal and
African oil assets, widening its net loss of $1.6 billion from $404 million the
previous year.
In coal, Glencore continued to divert its output from
Australia to other markets owing to a trade dispute between Australia and
China, Glasenberg said.
He ruled out buying BHP’s Mount Arthur thermal coal mine in
Australia but said it could look to swap some coal assets without compromising
the miner’s production cap of 150 million tonnes a year.
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