Hecla trumps Alamos bid with deal to acquire Aurizon

Aurizon Mines' Casa Berardi mine. Courtesy: Aurizon MinesHeadframe at the Casa Berardi mine. Courtesy: Aurizon Mines

VANCOUVER – Hecla Mining (HL-N) and Aurizon Mines (ARZ-T) started talking about a business merger in 2006 but couldn’t agree on terms. However, they liked each other enough that they maintained contact, waiting until the time was right to re-visit the idea of merging their like-minded companies.

Then, in January, Alamos Gold (AGI-T) made a move on Aurizon in an attempt to take over the gold producer in a moment of weakness, when a year of expansion work at its flagship mine had ground the company’s share price down to a four-year low.

Suddenly the right time was now, and so before the markets opened on Monday March 4th Hecla and Aurizon issued a news release six-plus years in the making.

Hecla is acquiring Aurizon in a cash-and-share deal worth $796 million, with an offer that represents a 12% premium to Alamos’ offer. If they approve the deal by a two-thirds margin, Aurizon shareholders will receive either $4.75 or 0.9953 of a Hecla share – or a combination of cash and shares – for each Aurizon share held.

Shareholders’ choices will be limited by a cash cap of $513.6 million and a Hecla share cap of 57 million shares. If all shareholders elect to receive cash and shares, the payout will comprise $3.11 in cash and 0.3446 of a Hecla share for each Aurizon share.

Hecla and Aurizon estimate the combination will create a mining company worth upwards of $1.6 billion. Hecla already operates two mines – the Green Creek mine in Alaska, which churned out 6.4 million oz. silver and 55,500 oz. gold in 2012, and the Lucky Friday silver-lead-zinc mine in Idaho, where production just resumed after a year of down time while the company completed necessary rehabilitation work. The Aurizon acquisition would add another mine to the list: the Casi Berardi gold mine in Quebec, which produced 137,000 oz. gold last year.

“Hecla and Aurizon together create a unique precious metals company with three long-life, high-grade, low-cost mines in some of the best mining jurisdictions in the world,” said Hecla’s president and CEO, Phillips Baker, in a statement. “These three properties have in common strong exploration potential on very large and contiguous land positions as well as locations near communities that are supportive to mining. In addition, all three utilize similar mining methods enabling Hecla to leverage the knowledge and experience from each mine across the organization.”

Casi Berardi, Greens Creek, and Lucky Friday are all underground mines. Casi Berardi and Greens Creek both mine and process roughly 2,000 tonnes of ore daily, while Lucky Friday works through about half that amount each day.

The deal would not be particularly dilutive for Hecla shareholders – Aurizon shareholders would own 17% of Hecla on a post-consolidation basis. Hecla’s board has fully endorsed the deal, pointing out that the acquisition would give Hecla an operating gold mine in low-risk Quebec, a 103% increase in gold reserves, and a slate of robust exploration properties.

Aurizon’s board also fully supports the deal. The main argument from Aurizon is simply that the Hecla offer is superior to the Alamos option. Alamos offered $4.65 per share or 0.2801 of a share for each Aurizon share, in a bid valued at $780 million.

Aurizon called the offer “financially inadequate and opportunistic.” In explaining why Alamos’ bid was insufficient, Aurizon pointed out that research analysts on average value Casi Berardi at $600 million and ascribe the advanced-stage Joanna property a value of $195 million, which means those properties alone give Aurizon a net asset value of $795 million. The company also has roughly $200 million in cash.

Aurizon shareholders were pleased with the deal: the company’s share price climbed 14¢ on the news to close at $4.49. It has been trading near that level since Alamos made its offer six weeks ago, which sparked a 33% rally. Hecla did not fare so well, losing US57¢ to close at US$4.07. The loss brought Hecla to within US37¢ of its 52-week low.

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