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By Tom Miles and Danielle Mario

ULAN BATOR/BEIJING, Aug 26 (Reuters) - Investors in Mongolia are jubilant after parliament put an end to years of debate on Tuesday, passing a package of laws that could turn the poor agrarian country into a powerhouse of mining and resources.

To some, the vote has unlocked the door to economic growth that will turn Mongolia into Dubai within a decade. To others, the task of turning a rich land into a rich population is one that is fraught with pitfalls, and the journey has only begun.

"Predicated on this decision, Mongolia will generate the highest rate of growth of GDP of any country in the world over the next 10 years, surpassing that of Qatar, which had fulfilled that role over the past decade and a half," said John Finigan, CEO of Mongolia's Golomt Bank. "This is transformational."

Mongolia's potential as an Asian tiger is not immediately apparent from its broken down and dusty capital, ringed by a city of tents, or its endless grasslands and deserts. But on paper at least, the path out of poverty is clear, now that parliament has unblocked foreign mining investment with a landmark agreement on Oyu Tolgoi, Ivanhoe Mines' huge copper and gold project.

Ivanhoe and its partner Rio Tinto waited for years to win acceptable terms, while Mongolia's hopeful horde of prospectors and mine developers looked on, fingers crossed.

The agreement, which still needs presidential approval, widely seen as a formality, unlocks $5 billion in investment from the two firms in the next five years, a huge boost to Mongolia's gross domestic product, which is running at $5 billion a year.

"Mongolia has 100 percent of its GDP available for a stimulus programme, and it doesn't even have to come up with the money," said Peter Marrow, chief executive of Khan Bank.

STAMPEDE

As well as copper and gold, Mongolia has huge potential in uranium and coking coal, a high grade fuel that is in short supply in neighbouring China, where demand from steelmakers has sent volumes of shipments from Australia rocketing this year.

The World Bank estimates that by 2015, mines in southern Mongolia could be exporting enough coking coal to satisfy Chinese demand of about 20 million tonnes a year, with overall coal exports of 45 million tonnes, up from about 5 million tonnes now.

Coking coal could bring in revenues of $2 billion and thermal coal another $1 billion, on top of the $2.3 billion a year from Oyu Tolgoi's output of 2 million tonnes of 30 percent copper concentrate, the bank estimates. Government revenues could swell further from gold, uranium and even oil.

"There is potential for oil production to ramp up. It will more than cover Mongolia's domestic needs, but there is no refining capacity here and the production is too small to hold up refining capacity," said the bank's senior mining specialist Graeme Hancock. "Once they find enough, it would justify pipeline development into China."

Oyu Tolgoi is also expected to trigger a building boom.

"With more companies coming, there will be improvement in commercial real estate, the building of apartments, and that will mean overall more jobs and activity for the people that are supplying for this mine," said Khan Bank CEO Marrow.

NOT SO FAST

Not so fast, say some Mongolians -- and some foreigners. The country needs to learn to walk before it can run.

Arshad Sayed, the World Bank's country manager in Mongolia, said Mongolia is just emerging from its own credit crunch, in which the government spent foreign reserves to prop up a see-sawing currency and the banks reined in lending.

"The economy had almost gone into cardiac arrest by the beginning of this year," he said. "Now this agreement has revived it but you can't expect it to start running immediately. It's too early to call victory right now."

He said the "best guess" for economic growth was still only 2-3 percent this year, rising to 5-7 percent or more next year.

Yuji Iwasaki, chief operating officer of Frontier Securities, which advises Japanese private equity in Mongolia, said several years of "double digit billion USD investment" were needed.

Expectations needed to be kept in check, said Sayed, not least among the 900,000 Mongolians in poverty -- a third of the population -- who are unlikely to see much change for years.

Much of the delay in agreeing terms for Oyu Tolgoi was down to wariness about releasing a genie that could unleash a "curse" of mineral wealth -- corruption, inequality and inefficiency.

To plan for the future, Mongolia could set up a budget stabilisation fund similar to those run by Chile and Russia. Sayed said the deputy prime minister was travelling to Chile to study such a fund and other "fiscal responsibility measures".

"History has not been kind to countries with natural resources," Sayed said. "They don't want to make the same mistakes that other countries have done."

 

Mon Aug 24, 2009. TOKYO (Reuters) - Controversial sumo champion Asashoryu is in hot water again after skipping training because he did not want to risk catching the H1N1 flu on a bus.   

The Mongolian 'yokozuna' told Monday's Japanese media he would take the matter up with the wrestlers' union after being reprimanded for a morning no-show at the weekend.

"(The infected wrestlers) were on the same bus, which was a reason," said Asashoryu, adding that the Japan Sumo Association (JSA) had done little to protect wrestlers from infection.

"What they say and what they do are two different things. I want them to think hard to come up with a way to protect us."

Around 30 wrestlers and sumo officials have caught the flu over the past 10 days. Wrestlers and sumo fans have been wearing flu masks as a precaution against the outbreak.

"Our livelihoods are at stake here," fumed the 28-year-old Asashoryu. "I'll be taking it up with the union."

The sport's governing body said they were monitoring the situation closely.

"We have instructed wrestlers to gargle, wash their hands thoroughly and wear masks," the JSA told Reuters. "We don't plan any further steps unless there are fresh developments."

Asashoryu was criticized for skipping morning training ahead of a major tournament in Nagoya recently amid the break-up of his marriage.

The 23-times Emperor's Cup winner insisted an elbow injury made it hard for him to practice on the current provincial sumo tour of Japan.

In 2007, Asashoryu was banned after being caught playing soccer in Mongolia, having forged a doctor's note for an apparent back injury.

His suspension triggered a bout of clinical depression, leading Asashoryu to seek solace at a luxury spa resort in his native country.

 

ULAN BATOR, Aug 20 (Reuters) - Mongolian parliamentary committees worked into the night on Thursday on legal revisions aimed at paving the way for foreign mining investment, including billions of dollars promised for the Oyu Tolgoi copper project.

Chief among the changes is repeal of the windfall profits tax, passed hurriedly in 2006, which was designed to allow the state to benefit from historically high copper and gold prices but instead set the stage for acrimonious negotiations with Oyu Tolgoi developer Ivanhoe Mines Ltd of Canada.

Ivanhoe, partner Rio Tinto and the Mongolian government earlier this month reached a draft agreement that requires changes to the legal framework for foreign investment. Committees also considered revisions to the corporate income tax law and additions to the water and road laws.

Mongolia is desperate for revenues to flow from new mining projects to allow the government to meet social commitments over the next several years.

Its economy, which is heavily dependent on mining, contracted by 1.3 percent in the first half of this year, and non-performing loans increased, speaker D Demberel said as he opened an extraordinary session of Parliament on Wednesday.

"These Draft Laws are directed at improving the legal environment related not only to the Oyu Tolgoi deposit but to other mineral deposits as well," Demberel said.

"Establishing the Oyu Tolgoi Investment Agreement will speed up the development of Mongolia, win time and create possibility for exploiting the next major deposits."

Fears that the Mongolian state would lose out on the benefits from the $4 billion Oyu Tolgoi project led the government in 2006 to pass a law requiring the state take 34 percent of any deposit, and 50 percent of any prospected with state money.

Contentious debates over the state share and the windfall profits tax followed soon after, throwing foreign investors into a state of uncertainty and freezing projects during the peak of the commodity boom.

The windfall profits tax did not apply to ore smelted in Mongolia, but Ivanhoe argued that building a smelter would raise its capital and investment costs prohibitively. Other opponents argued the law encouraged smuggling or underreporting of gold by Mongolia's many unregulated miners.

The windfall profits law assessed a 68 percent tax on copper above $2,600 a tonne, and gold above $500 an ounce. On Thursday, benchmark copper MUC3 traded at $6,030 a tonne and gold at $940.50 an ounce.

Under the current proposal on the windfall profit tax, it would be abolished effective Jan. 1, 2011.

Mongolia's two major parties held separate internal discussions on Wednesday over the changes, and the revisions will be debated by the full Parliment, or Great Hural, as early as Friday after moving out of committee.

(Reporting by Danielle Mario, writing by Lucy Hornby; Editing by Keiron Henderson )

 

Ivanhoe Mines says recent talks with Mongolian officials have resulted in proposed changes to the Oyu Tolgoi Copper-Gold mine investment agreement to be considered in a special session of the Mongolian Parliament Wednesday.

Author: Dorothy Kosich
Posted:  Monday , 17 Aug 2009

RENO, NV - 

A special session of the Mongolian Parliament will convene Wednesday to consider proposed legislative changes by the Government of Mongolia in support of the Oyu Tolgoi investment agreement.

On August 11, Mongolia's National Security Council-consisting of the prime minister, the president and the speaker of the State Great Khural (Parliament)-agreed to support the agreement, according to Ivanhoe Mines, the parent company of the copper and gold project.

In recently released financial results, Ivanhoe Mines said, "The National Security Council also agreed to support changes to some existing laws to give effect to the Oyu Tolgoi Investment Agreement. The Government announced that one of the proposed changes would involve cancellation of the three-year-old, 68% windfall profits tax on copper and gold effective January 1, 2011."

"In accordance with provisions of the 2006 Minerals Law, the August agreement also provided the government of Mongolia with a 34% equity interest in Ivanhoe Mines Mongolia Inc. LLC, which holds the Oyu Tolgoi mining licenses," Ivanhoe added.

"On August 13, the Government formally submitted draft bills to amend certain laws, along with the approved draft of the Oyu Tolgoi Investment Agreement, to the Speaker of the Parliament and asked the Speaker to convene a special session of Parliament, which currently is on summer recess," Ivanhoe said. The special session was planned to open today and is expected to begin discussion on Oyu Tolgoi by Wednesday.

Meanwhile, Ivanhoe noted the SouthGobi Ovoot Tolgoi coal mine achieved a record 384,000 tonnes in coal sales during the second quarter, generating revenue of $10.7 million at an average realized selling price of US$30 per tonne.

On August 12th, SouthGobi announced the Mongolian authorities had issued a mining license for the Tsagaan Tolgoi coal property in the South Gobi Region, 415 kilometers east of the Ovoot Tolgoi coal mine. An independent NI 43-101 resource estimate for Tsagaan Tolgoi in February 2008 estimated 23.4 million tonnes of measured resources and 13 million tonnes of indicated resources.

"The deposit has the potential to supply any future coal-fired power plant that may be developed to produce electricity for Ivanhoe Mines' planned Oyu Tolgoi copper-gold mining complex, which is approximately 115 kilometres northeast of Tsagaan Tolgoi," Ivanhoe said.

A decision regarding whether to develop Tsagaan Tolgoi into a mine would follow the results of more studies.

During the second quarter of this year, Ivanhoe reported a net loss of US$24.9 million (negative 7-cents per share), compared to a net income of $127.5 million (34-cents/sh) in Q208, a decrease of $152.4 million. The second-quarter 2008 net income was the result of a $201.4 gain on the sale of the investment in Jinshan Gold Mines.

"Results for Q209 were mainly affected by $38.1 million in exploration expenses; $10.5 million in general and administrative expenses and $4.3 million in interest expense. These amounts were offset by $5 million in income from discontinued operations and $21.7 million in mainly unrealized foreign exchange gains," Ivanhoe said.

Ivanhoe expects to begin capitalizing Oyu Tolgoi development costs once an investment agreement is finalized with the Government of Mongolia. The company's cash position as of June 30th was $368 million.

For the first six months of this year, Ivanhoe reported a net loss of $80.9 million or negative 22-cents per share, compared to a net income of $63.9 million (17-cents/sh) for the first half of 2008.

 

U.S. coal miner Peabody Energy Corp (BTU.N) sees slowing Chinese demand for thermal and metallurgical coal after a strong first six months of the year, Chief Executive Greg Boyce said on Wednesday. Boyce said China had built up stockpiles of steel and other products and he was sceptical the country would maintain the pace of its metallurgical and thermal coal imports in the second half of the year.

"We're seeing signs of both of those slowing down right now as China has kind of gone through their first stimulus and their export economy has not recovered," Boyce told reporters during a visit to Australia. Last month, St Louis-based Peabody said China would continue to be a big buyer of metallurgical, or coking coal, due to growing steel production. A company spokesman noted on Wednesday that China imported 15 million tons of met coal from January to May, but a whopping 22 million tons in June alone. "We see the pace continuing this year at a sustainable level consistent with the first five months of the year. June was an anomaly," spokesman Vic Svec told Reuters.

Peabody stock fell 1.6 percent to $34.50 at midday on the New York Stock Exchange. Analyst William Burns, or Johnson Rice & Co, said the market was not only reacting to Boyce's comments about China, but also to proposed Australian environmental legislation that could hurt the mining industry.

"This is such a fluid market," Burns said of the met coal business. "Two months ago, China saw it was cheaper to buy on the spot market. "They did it aggressively and it brought balance to the market and then they backed off. It was gamesmanship." He said short-term needs would be met by Chinese domestic miners, but that, in the longer term, Chinese demand would keep increasing.

While trade sources and analysts agree Chinese demand for thermal coal for power generation would slow from the record levels of the second quarter, most say its appetite for metallurgical or coking coal has not yet waned.

"I'll just say we continue to look for opportunities, whether it is the recent joint venture we did in Mongolia, whether it is the things we are doing in China," he said.

CANBERRA, Aug 12 (Reuters) - By James Grubel

 
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