South Africa ministry approves AngloGold asset sale, blocks delisting

AngloGold Ashanti's Mponeng mine in South Africa. Credit: JMK (Wikimedia Commons).

South Africa’s mines ministry has approved the sale of AngloGold Ashanti’s (NYSE: AU; JSE: ANG) last remaining assets in the country to Harmony Gold (NYSE: HMY), on condition that it does not delist from the Johannesburg Stock Exchange.

AngloGold announced the US$300 million sale earlier this year. The portfolio included Mponeng, the world’s deepest gold mine and the company’s last underground operation in South Africa.

The company said at the time that it would consider moving its primary listing on the JSE after leaving the country. Earlier this month, however, it said that was no longer a priority amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

Harmony Gold’s acquisition of AngloGold’s operations in South Africa is expected to help it sustain growth and replace capacity. Most of Harmony’s output in the country comes from its Masimong and Unisel mines, which are running out of ore.

The Department of Mineral Resources and Energy (DMRE) corroborated the approval of the proposed transaction on Aug. 26. “The Department can confirm that an application in terms of Section 11 of the MPRDA has been received and was approved on 24 July,” the DMRE told Reuters via email.

AngloGold said it had not yet received all necessary approvals, adding it was still in talks with the government.

The sale would mark the miner’s exit from South Africa to focus on more profitable mines in Ghana, Australia and the Americas.

The company, which recently lost Kelvin Dushnisky as chief executive, was born out of the mines bought and built by Anglo American (LSE: AAL), the mining juggernaut founded by the Oppenheimer family more than a century ago.

The company was the dominant gold miner for decades but progressively became weaker as it closed and sold old mines in South Africa, in favour of offshore investments.

Harmony Gold CEO Peter Steenkamp has repeatedly said that South Africa is its main investment target.

South Africa’s gold industry, however, continues to face challenges, including geological and safety aspects of extracting ore from some of the world’s deepest underground mines.

Harmony Gold is betting on recreating the successful strategy applied after it bought Anglo’s Moab Khotsong mine in 2017. Half of that money has already been paid back, Steenkamp said.

— This article first appeared in MINING.com.

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