Also worth remembering what Charlie had to say pre-merger (I'm not judging his accuracy - I'm just sitting on the fence here) -
Oz Minerals not OzJet By Charlie Aitken Print this article Wednesday June 25: Zinifex (XFX) shareholders have voted overwhelmingly in favour of the merger proposal from Oxiana (OXR). The result is Oz Minerals, a new major domestic resource company, and the world's second largest zinc producer. I have always been a strong supporter of Owen Hegarty and the "Mighty Ox". However, even from the first announcement of the Oxiana/Zinifex merger, the majority of domestic resource analysts showed little interest in the prospect. The major criticism of the proposed "merger of equals" focused on the absence of earnings synergies. Consequently the lack of instant earnings gratification for analysts relegated the proposal to the backburner of domestic resource research. You would have thought that analysts may have learned the lesson about instantly earnings per share positive acquisitions, but alas no. Apparently putting two debt-free companies together to create a company of world significance is uninteresting if there isn't instant earnings per share growth. The great winners of the credit crunch will be debt-free companies, particularly those that merge to create an even stronger entity. Short termism In addition, the significant earnings exposure of the merged group to the falling zinc price has provided little excitement for the consensus view, which is overwhelmingly focused on the short-term outlook. Further, I believe the lack of incentive for arbitrage and hedge fund activity has similarly weighed on the performance of both companies. As a result, in between the announcement of the merger proposal, and the vote by the Zinifex shareholders, there has been an absolute dearth of broker research. It's as though nobody cares. It must be very frustrating for management with a clear vision of the future to be constantly held hostage to short-term views and judged on short-term performance. The lack of interest in Oz Minerals reminds me very much of the dismissive view of Fortescue (FMG) until recently, when the index weight has become an important focus for some domestic institutional investors and analysts. It is ironic that Oz Minerals is set to become Australia's fifth largest resource company and the third largest domestic diversified play with an expected market cap of about $A8.5 billion. Oz Minerals is expected to rank about 26th in the ASX 200, with an index weight of about 0.8%. It is worth noting that the market cap is expected to increase to about $A12.5 billion given the capacity to make an $A4 billion acquisition. Subsequently, Oz Minerals would rank just behind Newcrest (NCM) at 21st by market cap with an ASX 200 index weighting of about 1.1%. Scale and diversity There is little doubt that the primary aim of the merger was focused on scale, diversity and complementary assets, rather than operational synergies. As a result the merger has provided Zinifex shareholders with the diversity of copper and gold exposure while providing Oxiana investors with production scale, balance sheet strength and the opportunity to become part of a major global resource company. Importantly, both scale and diversity have been the underlying theme of global resource consolidation over the past five years. Brazil's Vale, for example, has pursued a commodity diversification strategy with the Inco acquisition. The Inco takeover generated absolutely no synergies but provided Vale shareholders with nickel scale and new commodity diversity. Subsequently, Vale has sought a merger with Xstrata and is rumoured to be looking at Anglo American or Freeport McMoran. Similarly Rusal, the largest global player in aluminium/alumina, is not
Untitled generating operational synergies with a 25% interest in Norilsk, the world's biggest nickel producer. Rusal is seeking a merger with Norilsk to achieve a global scale and commodity diversification. The Rusal chief executive was actually quoted as saying that the aim of a merger was to provide the ability to directly compete with BHP. There is no doubt that the proposed BHP/Rio merger is both compelling and unique with complimentary tier-one assets and a forecast $US3.7 billion in earnings synergies. However, in addition, BHP chief executive Marius Kloppers has constantly reinforced the additional scale a Rio merger would provide in order to meet the unprecedented supply challenge and the rising cap-ex costs currently facing resource companies. The structural increase in commodity demand driven by Chinese industrialisation against a backdrop of chronic supply constraints will support a global resource consolidation resulting in three or four "super majors". In this regard, it appears resources are the new rainmakers on Wall Street. The value of mining takeovers has more than tripled to $US199 billion in the first five months of the year compared to last year. This is despite a 37% fall in global merger & acquisition activity over the same period. This represents the first time mining mergers have topped the global M&A table since Bloomberg began compiling data in 1998. There is little doubt that the recent global consolidation has been driven by the aim of achieving scale of production and commodity diversification. However, despite the Oxiana/Zinifex merger clearly reflecting this theme, it appears the majority of domestic analysts remain sceptical. It is baffling and illogical. I think the negative view provides a genuine opportunity to generate real long-term outperformance for an investor not constrained by a short-termist view. Diversified model In order to highlight the opportunity for Oz Minerals, I believe it is worth reflecting on the rise of Xstrata from relative obscurity to the world’s fourth-largest resource company. The emergence of Xstrata as a global resource major is the direct result of an aggressive "growth by acquisition" strategy by current chief executive Mick Davis, a former Billiton finance director. In conjunction with the marketing expertise of Glencore, which owns a 40% stake, Xstrata has built a portfolio of quality tier-one assets with the aim of replicating the scale and diversity of the BHP Billiton model. With the recent merger proposal by Vale, Xstrata has become both predator and prey in the current global consolidation. As a result, Xstrata has grown from market cap of less than $US1 billion in October 2001, when Davis was appointed chief executive, to over $US80 billion now. Consequently, the aggressive "growth by acquisition" strategy has supported a return of 835% over the past five years. In addition, it appears Davis believes there is still significant current value in Xstrata after a London Stock Exchange filing revealed he purchased 167,480 shares on May 22 at an average of £41.50. Consequently, I believe Oz Minerals has a similar opportunity, like Xstrata, to build a quality diversified portfolio of assets providing the unique situation of becoming both predator and prey in the imminent acceleration of the global resource consolidation. It is ironic that while Oxiana has both the aim and opportunity of replicating the diversified model, I believe Xstrata may see an opportunity to add scale to its own growth aspirations with a takeover proposal. Either way I expect significant outperformance for Oz Minerals shareholders. In this regard, Andrew Michelmore recently stated the intention of Oz Minerals was diversification through acquisitions. "We would like to have some longer-term contract prices where you don't get that volatility and fluctuation … and that is why we'd like to get into bulks and energy." He listed uranium, coal, gas and hydro-electricity as opportunities considering Page 2 Untitled energy consumption accounted for about 25% of the company's operating costs. He is keen to hedge energy costs, particularly at Century, by "locking up supply" of coal seam methane in Queensland. In addition Michelmore indicated the board would not be wasting time looking at small bolt-on acquisitions, adding: "Don't chase rats and mice." Further, he said, “25–35% debt to equity is a sensible range … so you could add $A3 billion of debt to the books and stick within the range." Considering Oz Minerals has $A1.2 billion of cash, there is a $A4 billion war chest for possible acquisitions. It is worth noting that just Prominent Hill and Century alone, are expected to generate 2008-09 operating cash flow of about $A1 billion a year. As a result, Oz Minerals is strongly positioned to participate in further consolidation of the resource sector. In this regard, Michelmore also said his aim was to make Oz Minerals a "leader in mid-caps" globally, which implies expanding the market cap to more than $A20 billion. Zinc: the bottom It appears that analysts remain blindsided by the short-term performance of zinc. There is no doubt that the 50% fall in the zinc price over the past 18 months has reflected a deterioration in the demand/supply fundamentals. A significant increase in Chinese production has resulted in a zinc surplus with London Metal Exchange zinc stocks up 70,000 tonnes this year to a 21-month high of nearly 150,000 tonnes.However, there are a few factors pointing to an end of the decline, and a floor for the zinc price. There is little doubt that the tripling in zinc prices between 2004 and 2007 encouraged a massive increase in Chinese investment in small-scale, lower-grade projects. The Chinese market is both highly fragmented, with the average mine under 10,000 tonnes a year, and relatively high cost. In addition, the majority of new Chinese zinc capacity was commissioned at $US1.50–2 a pound. Consequently, I believe at current levels a significant amount of Chinese capacity is well below the marginal cost of production. As a result, I expect mine closures and a decline in zinc production. In this regard, customs statistics revealed that Chinese net imports for May were 4000 tonnes. In addition, the first sign of a slowdown in Chinese metal production has emerged with the news that 28 of the largest zinc smelters have cut production in the traditionally high demand period, with average operating capacity down to 78% in May compared to 83% last year. Further, signs of distress for domestic high cost producers have emerged with sector margins under pressure. In the March quarter, Perliya (PEM) reported operating costs of US94¢ a pound, while CBH Resources (CBH) has announced lay-offs in NSW. In the meantime, the independent expert forecasts Oz Minerals to produce about 795,000 tonnes of zinc next year at an average cash cost of just US52¢ a pound. Despite the significant increase in production, it is worth noting that Chinese zinc demand remains strong, with year-to-date consumption growth 14.7% up on the previous corresponding period. China now accounts for 32.1% of global zinc consumption, up from just 14.9% in 2000. This step-change in long-term demand has supported a massive reversal in the Chinese net zinc trade. Between 2000 and 2007, Chinese zinc demand growth has averaged 15.7% pa while mine output and metal production have lagged, up just 7.3%, and 10.2% respectively. As a result, since 2001 China has swung from a significant exporter to a net importer, which is a trend that will continue. It represents the crucial long-term theme for the zinc market, not short-term fluctuations. Oz Minerals I believe the Oz Minerals negative consensus view is typically the "glass half-empty" approach to investment, where short-termism overrides the positive long-term fundamentals. In an environment where the rising cost of debt is Page 3 Untitled exposing companies with weak balance sheets, Oz Minerals has effectively no debt and $A1.2 billion in cash. I expect Oz Minerals to generate $A1.5 billion in operating cash flow next year, implying a 2008-09 price to cash flow multiple of five times, compared to our target of 8–10. In addition, on our figures, the merged entity is now trading on 2008-09 price/earnings multiple of 10 times. Oz Minerals is a strong buy and my 12-month target is $4.50. Yes, I stand by my 12-month price target being 68% above the current Oxiana share price and I think the "Mighty Oz" is a complete risk-adjusted bargain at current prices. This is the bottom in zinc and the bottom in Oxiana.
OZL Price at posting:
$17.35 Sentiment: Buy Disclosure: Held