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Davis said the strategic rationale behind a merger was "highly compelling." "A merger will fuse the respective strengths of the two companies into a unique, vertically integrated natural resources group," he said. Glencore chairman Simon Murray said the merged company "will have the scale to play a key role in meeting the growing global demand for commodities whilst helping resource holding countries create value from their natural endowments." Xstrata, based in Zug, Switzerland, was formed in 2002 when it bought Glencore's coal assets. The company mines copper in the Americas, zinc in Spain and ferrochrome and vanadium in Australia and South Africa. Glencore extracts, ships and refines raw materials from coal, to copper to corn. It is based in the Swiss town of Baar but has its main stock listing in London. Glencore was founded in 1974 by Marc Rich, the fugitive trader who was controversially pardoned in 2001 by then United States President Bill Clinton just hours before he left office. Rich sold the company to its employees in 1994, and the firm has been at pains to distance itself from its founder and any whiff of improper activity, though environmental groups have since targeted the company for its mining interests. Xstrata shares were up 2.9 percent at 985.2 pence on the London Stock Exchange. Glencore shares were up 0.5 percent at 344.95 pence.
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