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Distressed asset buyers see silver lining

Update : 15 Mar 2016, 06:22 PM

After years on the sidelines, funds specializing in troubled assets are set to take center stage in the mining industry, driving deals in a sector where the top players alone plan to raise more than $30bn through sales to cut debt.

Overall deal volume in mining and metals last year sank to its lowest level globally since 2003, according to Thomson Reuters data, as the industry’s sellers, crippled by more than $1tn in debt, crowded a market with very few buyers.

Bankers, funds and investors, however, say that could change in 2016, as specialist buyers rethink a market where prices are languishing, mines are losing money and the traditional competition is weak.

Funds sidelined and waiting for the right deals could amount to as much as $3bn, according to a ballpark figure from corporate finance and restructuring firm FTI Consulting.

“The longer this commodity rout continues, the greater number of restructures,” David McCarthy, national leader for restructuring at Deloitte in Sydney, told Reuters.

“Some of those will be by existing financiers and existing equity holders. For others, the risk will be too great - and that’s where distressed opportunities will (be).”

Oaktree Capital, the world’s largest investor in distressed debt, opened an office in Sydney this month, in part at least because of the strain in mining, it said, particularly iron ore, where it sees potential for deals.

Others are targeting existing mines where the geology has already been proven - and not development projects - for gold, copper, zinc and rare minerals, all exposed to the later stages of the economic cycle and renewable energy.

“I think it will be a busy year for everyone in the industry,” said Michael Ryan, a senior managing director of FTI Consulting in Perth.

“I expect to see a lot of restructuring and cost cutting work, debt for equity transactions, restructuring balance sheet type transactions, sales of assets, divestiture of non-key assets to further shore up (distressed miners’) balance sheets.”

In Australia’s struggling iron ore sector for example, existing lenders to Atlas Iron agreed to take a haircut on repayments in return for a larger equity stake.

But steel and iron ore group Arrium, with nearly $2bn of debt, had to look outside for help, turning to GSO Capital Partners, the global credit and alternative investment arm of PE behemoth Blackstone Group.

Earlier this month, it secured $927mn in funding to help Arrium retire debt and overhaul its business.

Media reports have said Cerberus Capital Management, another major US investor in distressed assets, also considered a move on Arrium and remains on the sidelines. Cerberus did not respond to an emailed request for comment.

In November, global PE group Denham Capital backed Perth-based Auctus Minerals and its management team of mining restructure specialists with $130mn, as it bought battered Atherton Resources, which holds zinc and gold-copper resources in Queensland.

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