Equinox Minerals

Equinox Minerals Limited
Public
Industry Mining
Fate merger
Founded 1993
Founder Craig Williams
Defunct 2011
Headquarters Toronto, Perth, Canada Australia
Key people
Peter Tomsett CHAIR
Craig Williams PRES, CEO
David McAusland DIR
Products Gold, copper, cobalt,
uranium
Revenue C$1,046.787 mil 2010Increase96.8%[1]
IncreaseC$269.105 mil 2010
over loss of 183 mil in '09[1]
Total assets C$3,246.76 mil Dec'10
Increase96% qoq[1]
Total equity IncreaseC$1,931.01 mil 2010[2]
Number of employees
179 (December 2010)
Divisions Zambia (LMC)
Website www.equinoxminerals.com

Equinox Minerals is a mining and exploration company with corporate offices in Perth, Australia and Toronto, Canada. It has operations in Peru, Australia and Zambia but most of its current activity is concentrated in Zambia where through subsidiary the Lumwana Mining Company, it operates mines in the Zambian copperbelt region. The region contains one of the world's largest copper-cobalt deposits.[3] Through Liontown Resources Limited and Alturas Minerals Corp., the company has gold and copper-gold exploration interests in Peru and Australia.[4] The Lumwana project which has enough reserves to be productive for 37 years, cost the company one billion dollars to develop.[5][6] In Zambia it has been credited with supporting social development through projects which aim to build schools, attract professionals to areas around its mine sites.[7] 2010 copper production was 323.4 million pounds (146,690 tonnes) 68% higher than in 2009 (192.1 million pounds).[1] Equinox production represents half of parent company Barrick Gold's copper production.[8]

The company produces slightly more copper than it sells (In 2010 323.4 vs 290.2 million pounds up from 2009 when it was 290.42 vs 179.72 million pounds), 77% of production occurred during the first nine months of the year (production was 113 kt, sales were 98kt); capital expenditure amounted to $66 million.[1] In September 2010 company debt was $433 million, long term debt fell significantly in the last quarter of 2010 from $422 million down to $295.57 million.[1][9] Even though Equinox doesn't produce gold Barrick Gold, the world's largest gold company (both in terms of reserves and production) acquired Equinox Minerals in April 2011; the deal will lower the fraction of revenue Barrick receives from the sale of gold to 80%.[8]

History

The company formed after a merger between Equinox and Equinox Resources in January, 2004, and was incorporated the same month as a Canadian company.[10] It began operations in Zambia in 1996.[11] Prior to being acquired by Equinox in 1999 at least 10 different companies failed in their attempts to develop the Lumwana project, which covers 2 major copper mines and 1355 km squared in area.[6][12] In 2010 Equinox was involved in a couple major transactions; first it acquired the Jabal Sayid copper-gold-silver project 350 km from Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, capable of producing 2.6 million tons of ore per year starting in 2012.[13] In February it launched a $4.8 billion hostile takeover bid for copper producer Lundin Mining, at the same time Lundin was attempting its own takeover ($9 billion Inmet Mining merger which would result in the creation of Symterra Corp).[14] (As of April 2011 none of those deals have been finalized, combination with Lundin Mining would raise Equinox production growth rate 23%). In April 2011, Equinox rejected a takeover offer by China Minmetals,[15] but later accepted a bid by Barrick Gold.[16] On April 25, 2011, Barrick Gold Corporation announced the acquisition[17] of Equinox for $7.69 billion.

Exploration projects

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Equinox Minerals 2010 Annual Report" (PDF). 2011-04-12.
  2. "equinox minerals google finance balance sheet". Retrieved 2011-06-06.
  3. "Company Profile". Invest Smart Australia. Retrieved 2010-04-24.
  4. "Equinox Minerals Ltd.". minesite. Retrieved 2010-04-24.
  5. "Lumwana open pit mine 37 years to go". 2009-10-03.
  6. 1 2 "$1bn Lumwana copper project raises Zambian hopes of resuscitating its economy". 2009-05-01.
  7. 1 2 "Equinox Pumped In $1 Billion Into Lumwana Despite Unfavorable Commodity Prices". 2009.
  8. 1 2 "Barrick, Equinox in pact". 2011-04-29.
  9. "Equinox Minerals 2010 Third Quarter Report" (PDF). February 2011.
  10. "Equinox Minerals on the Australian Stock Market". mysharetrading.com. 2008-07-31.
  11. "Zambia:No turning back for Lumwana". allafrica.com. 2008-11-18.
  12. 1 2 "Perseverance pays for equinox at Lumwana". 2008-04-21.
  13. "Jabal Sayid Mine Development Project". Retrieved 2011-04-17.
  14. "Equinox proposed $4.8 billion takeover of Lundin Mining". 2011-02-28.
  15. "Equinox rejects Minmetals". 2011-04-11. Retrieved 2011-04-11.
  16. "Barrick Gold beats Minmetals to buy Equinox Minerals". BBC News. 25 April 2011. Retrieved 25 April 2011.
  17. Donville, Christopher; Pasternak, Sean B. (2011-04-25). "Barrick Gold to Buy Equinox for $7.66 Billion, Topping Offer by Minmetals". Bloomberg.
  18. "Equinox Restructures the Zambezi Joint Venture". 2005-06-14.
  19. "Alturas Announces Second Tranche of Financing and Completion of Debt Settlement". about.com. 2010-04-01.
  20. "Equinox Minerals Lumwana Copper Mine". Retrieved 2010-04-28.
  21. "Lumwana Mine". 2009-04-09. Archived from the original on 2009-04-14.
  22. "Lumwana production shoots up by 37 p.c.". 2010-04-09.
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