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						Hedge fund Elliott ups 
						stakes at BHP by crossing threshold 
						
		 
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		 [August 16, 2017] 
		By Sonali Paul and Barbara Lewis 
		 
		MELBOURNE/LONDON (Reuters) - Hedge fund 
		Elliott Management has upped the stakes at BHP, gaining powers to push 
		for change by raising its holding in the miner's London-listed arm to 5 
		percent. 
		 
		Under English company law this threshold gives a shareholder the right 
		to requisition a general meeting and circulate a resolution on which 
		other shareholders can vote. 
		 
		Elliott has been agitating since April for an overhaul at BHP, which is 
		listed in both Britain and Australia, calling for the company to quit 
		all or part of its petroleum business, boost returns and ditch its dual 
		structure. 
		 
		At first Elliott held a 4.1 percent "economic interest" in BHP's 
		London-listed shares, but in a statement on Wednesday it said it now 
		held 5 percent. Elliott said it also held a small economic interest in 
		BHP's Australian shares. 
		 
		The London-listed arm, whose shares were up 1.6 percent by 0845 on 
		Wednesday, holds around 42 percent of BHP overall. 
		 
		Elliott, which said it was seeing signs of change at BHP, declined to 
		comment on whether it would call a general meeting. 
						
		
		  
						
		"BHP appears to have already taken steps toward a smarter, more 
		value-generative way of conducting business, and we support and 
		encourage continued progress," Elliott said. 
		 
		ENHANCE VALUE 
		 
		BHP, which declined comment on Wednesday, has so far rejected Elliott's 
		proposals as flawed or too costly. 
		 
		But Elliott said it was hopeful that under new chairman Ken MacKenzie, 
		who takes office at the start of September, BHP would be more open to 
		shareholder demands. 
						
		
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			Australian mining company BHP's corporate logo is seen at their 
			Melbourne, Australia, headquarters May 15, 2017. BHP/Handout via 
			REUTERS. 
            
			  
"Recent statements by the company give us confidence that Chairman-elect Ken 
MacKenzie will heed shareholders' calls to take constructive steps to enhance 
value for BHP and its owners," it said. 
 
Those steps include exiting the U.S. shale business "and an in-depth, open and 
truly independent review of the petroleum business' place in BHP's portfolio." 
 
BHP has acknowledged that it paid far too much when it entered the shale 
business and in the long run will look to get out of it when the time is right. 
"We and other shareholders look forward to hearing more from management on this 
subject, following the growing analyst and shareholder consensus that BHP should 
exit U.S. shale," Elliott said in its statement. 
 
Other investors were doubtful about what Elliott's campaign had achieved so far. 
 
"They've put a bit of a blowtorch to BHP - but I don't think you can say 
anything that they've done has been successful as such," said Andy Forster, 
senior investment officer at Argo Investments, a top 20 shareholder in BHP's 
Australian shares. 
 
"They're not going to give it away," Forster said of the shale business. 
 
Elliott said last month it also had deep concerns over a BHP proposal to enter 
the over-supplied fertilizer market. 
 
(Additional reporting by Melanie Burton in Melbourne and Kirstin Ridley in 
London; editing by Richard Pullin and Alexander Smith) 
				 
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