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Thu, 18 Feb 2010 13:26:09
A Hong Kong newspaper has said that judged from a mining perspective, Australia can be regarded as an elderly person and Indonesia an adult. But Mongolia is just a baby which has yet to grow up to reveal its real potential.
The Standard has singled out two Mongolian companies that are expected to make news in 2010. Toronto-listed SouthGobi Energy Resources’ potential may not be reflected in the stock's 11 percent slide on its first trading day in Hong Kong, but the future holds much promise for this Canadian company, which raised USD439 million from its initial public offering, and which is a strategically located premium coal producer in Mongolia.
Ovoot Tolgoi is SouthGobi's flagship coal mine while Tavan Tolgoi is the world's largest undeveloped coal field. Both are to be connected with road and railway links to China's steel hubs such as Jiayuguan in Gansu and Baotou in Inner Mongolia. Beijing has also approved huge coal-fired plants for Jiuquan near Jiayuguan.
SouthGobi's coal quality is higher than that of Chinese coal producers. The forecast target volume in 2009 and 2010 is around 2 to 3 million tons as SouthGobi negotiates to boost sales. The firm is aiming for a production surge of 15 million tons in 2015. Transport of the coal will be made easier after both the Chinese and Mongolian governments approved three coal corridors across their common border. Transportation has not been a problem yet, since clients have been sending their own trucks to the coal mines to collect supplies daily. One of SouthGobi's strengths is its versatile management team.
The other one mentioned by the newspaper is Mongolia Energy Corporation, which is transforming itself from a single-project coal company to a multi-mineral resources developer. Its management is banking on large scale exports from western Mongolia to the Xinjiang Autonomous Region whose transport infrastructure is to be upgraded. Mongolia Energy has built a 310-kilometer highway to access the Chinese market from its mines and also aims to develop copper mines connected to the coal reserve.
Simon Lo Lin-shing, MEC's largest shareholder, is pushing the company to become a fully fledged resource developer. Its main asset is coal concessions it acquired in 2007. It has also carried out eight drilling projects involving oil and gas, iron and other minerals.
One advantage is that MEC faces weak competition from other firms seeking resources in western Mongolia.
 

* Mongolia to hold 100 pct of Tavan Tolgoi coal deposit

* Government cancels auction of 49 percent stake - sources

* JP Morgan, Deutsche Bank no longer advising on sale

* Mongolia seeking contract agreement with global miner (Adds analyst comment, details)

By Joseph Chaney, Asia Resources Correspondent.HONG KONG, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Mongolia's government has cancelled the auction of an estimated $2 billion stake in one of the world's largest untapped coal deposits, ending the hopes of global mining giants eager for a slice of the project, sources with direct knowledge of the matter said.

Read more...
 

* Offer price at C$0.96/shr

* Offer at premium of 12 pct to co's Friday close

* Shares up as much as 16 pct (Recasts, adds details and share movement)

Feb 1 (Reuters) - Canada's Khan Resources Inc (KRI.TO) agreed to be bought by Beijing-based CNNC Overseas Uranium Holding Ltd in a deal that values the uranium explorer at C$56.5 million ($52.9 million) and gives the Chinese firm access to the Dornod field in Mongolia.

Khan Resources said CNNC, a subsidiary of China National Nuclear Corp, will pay 96 Canadian cents per share, which represents a 12 percent premium to Khan Resources closing price on Friday.

Khan Resources, which holds a 58 percent stake in Dornod, has been looking to renew its licenses for the project, following the Mongolian government's decision to regulate uranium mining.

Read more...
 

TORONTO (Reuters) - Colorful dealmaker Robert Friedland, who made a fortune selling an undeveloped Canadian nickel deposit, is seeking new options for his current venture, Ivanhoe Mines (IVN.TO), as it starts building a massive copper-gold mine near Mongolia's border with resource-hungry China.

 

Deals

A statement said the company, which has partnered with mining giant Rio Tinto (RIO.L) in Mongolia, had hired bankers to look at possibilities "to further enhance shareholder value." That might include offering new shares or bonds, borrowing money or selling a subsidiary, as well as "various corporate transactions." The company stressed that no specific deal was under consideration.

Read more...
 

BEIJING (Reuters) - Mongolia may eventually list state-owned mineral assets in international stock markets so that the country can convert more of its natural resource wealth into cash, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.

Prime Minister Sukhbaatariin Batbold said that the poor, landlocked country is first studying the creation of three companies -- one for mining assets, another for energy assets and a third for infrastructure holdings.

The government would then look to float shares in these companies in London, New York or Hong Kong, before bringing them to Mongolia's domestic stock market, he said.

"People ask the question, 'why we are sitting here, sitting on our mineral resources doing nothing, whilst others do get the benefits of these resources by bringing them to the international financial markets, especially the foreign companies,'" Batbold told the Wall Street Journal.

He said those companies were "doing a good promotion of Mongolia," but "now is a good time to think about our own approach, our own move to the international financial market."

Just before Batbold took office in October, Mongolia signed a landmark investment agreement with Ivanhoe Mines (IVN.TO) and Rio Tinto (RIO.L)(RIO.AX) to develop the Oyu Tolgoi deposit in the Gobi desert, a project that will help the Mongolian state meet its budgetary commitments once it is producing copper and gold.

Mongolia, with less than 3 million people to China's 1.3 billion, is struggling to be more than a raw materials supplier to its giant neighbor.

It was hit hard by the global financial crisis, as plunging metals prices last year dried up state revenues while repayment of bank loans to the booming construction sector slowed to a crawl.

Investors have seen the Oyu Tolgoi agreement, signed this month, as a watershed, setting a precedent for other resource deals after over three years of uncertainty and wrangling over minerals investment laws.

Source: http://www.reuters.com/


 

 
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