Harbinger Capital, a hedge fund and one of US copper firm Asarcoâs largest bondholders, has decided to withdraw from the race to take-over Asarco. This leaves the two key contenders Indiaâs Sterlite and Grupo Mexico in the race to gain control of Asarco, according to this report. Sterlite may get the support of Harbinger Capital Partners in its take-over plan.
Although the report did not state any reason why Harbinger may back Sterlite, it is well known that the hedge fund( which has support from Citigroup), earlier extended its support to Asarco in the fight against Grupo Mexico and the environmental suits. Citigroup and Harbinger together comprise Asarcoâs largest bondholders and their support is crucial for Sterlite. It had also said that it would oppose Grupo Mexicoâs bid.
BIDS AND COUNTERBIDS:
Harbinger earlier proposed a $500 million take-over offer to the US bankruptcy court in May, countering the bids of Sterlite and Grupo Mexico, the former owners of Asarco. The fund house had termed Sterlite and Grupo Mexico as âunreliable suitorsâ while making its own proposal at the Southern District court of Texas.
Asarco, which filed for bankruptcy in 2005 with over $1 billion in environmental damage and asbestos claims, is seeking to sell assets as part of a bankruptcy reorganisation plan. Sterlite had offered $1.1 billion in cash and a $600 million note. Mexican miner Grupo Mexico, which acquired Asarco in a leveraged buyout in 1999 but lost board control of the company due to the bankruptcy, has made a $1.55 billion competing offer for Asarco (including $1.3 billion in cash).
Sterlite Industries had recently increased its offer price for Asarco by $170 million to $1.87 billion to counter a revised offer by Grupo Mexico which reportedly put in a fresh bid of $2.9 billion (including 1.3 billion in cash against Vedantaâs $1.1 billion cash). Sterlite raised the non-cash portion of its bid due to rising copper prices which makes the acquisition attractive.
WHOâS AT ADVANTAGE?
Despite offering less than half the cash offered by Sterlite and Grupo Mexico, Harbinger felt it had a better chance of winning. This is because, it felt, Sterliteâs plan cannot be confirmed because it will lack votes from asbestos creditors who have agreed to support Grupo Mexico's plan.
Harbinger believes its plan is better than Grupo Mexico's because it would allow Asarco to keep a $6.87 billion judgement against the Mexican miner that arose from a dispute over the transfer of its one-time Peruvian mining unit, Southern Copper Corp. Moreover, it feels Grupo Mexicoâs plan cannot be approved because it would allow the Mexican firm to retain control of Asarco.
It is not going to be an easy way out as creditors themselves are split between the plans. Government agencies responsible for cleaning up Asarcoâs pollution support the Sterlite sale, while people harmed by the asbestos products of an Asarco unit support the Grupo Mexico plan.