Hedge fund wants to unify
BHP's corporate structure, split off U.S. oil
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[April 10, 2017]
SYDNEY
(Reuters) - Hedge fund manager Elliott Advisors said on Monday it had
sent a letter to BHP Billiton directors outlining a plan to unlock value
by scrapping the mining giant's dual- corporate structure, demerging its
oil business and rejigging its capital return policy.
"The goal is to provide details of the BHP shareholder value unlock plan
to all of BHP's shareholders so that BHP can engage openly with all
parties on the plan," Elliott said in a statement.
BHP did not immediately provide comment on the matter when contacted by
Reuters.
Elliott said it holds a "long economic interest" of about 4.1 percent of
the issued shares in London-listed BHP Billiton PLC.
That stake is worth $3.81 billion, Reuters calculations showed based on
Friday's closing price.
Elliott also said it holds rights with its affiliates to acquire up to
0.4 percent of the issued shares in Sydney-listed BHP Billiton Ltd,
worth about $372 million.
Its letter, dated April 10 and released by Elliott online, did not
mention any BHP directors by name.
Started in 1977, Elliott manages assets worth more than $32.7 billion,
according to the company.
Its investors include pension plans, sovereign wealth funds and
hospitals, among others, it said.
Elliott, an activist investor, also has a 3.25 percent stake in Akzo
Nobel NV. It is encouraging the Dutch paints and chemicals group to
enter talks with spurned U.S. suitor PPG Industries Inc.
Elliott said its plan could increase shareholder value by up to 48.6
percent for holders of BHP's Sydney shares and 51 percent for London
shareholders.
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A logo for mining
company BHP Billiton adorns a sign outside the Perth Convention
Centre where their annual general meeting was being held in Perth,
Western Australia, November 19, 2015. REUTERS/David Gray/File Photo
It
also proposed spinning off BHP's U.S. oil and petroleum arm into a separate
listing on the New York Stock Exchange.
It estimated the value of BHP's U.S. petroleum business at around $22 billion.
BHP's Australian shares closed 4.64 percent higher at A$25.73, with most of the
gains coming near the end of trade.
BHP Billiton was created in 2001 through the merger of the Australian Broken
Hill Proprietary Co and the Anglo–Dutch Billiton PLC.
The Australia-registered arm is one of the largest companies in Australia
measured by market value. The Britain-registered arm has a primary listing on
the London Stock Exchange and is part of the benchmark FTSE 100 Index.
(This version of the story corrects headline and first paragraph to show
proposal is to scrap dual-corporate structure, not dual-listing.)
(Reporting by James Regan and Jamie Freed; Editing by Stephen Coates and
Christopher Cushing)
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