Glencore Plc agreed to buy a majority stake in Teck Resources Ltd.’s coal business for $6.93 billion, ending a months-long saga and setting the stage for the commodity giant to spin off its own coal unit.
Glencore will own 77%, and steelmakers Nippon Steel Corp and Posco will hold the remainder of the business, the companies said in statements Tuesday. The deal implies an enterprise value of $9 billion for Teck’s coal business.
The agreement will mark the end of a more than seven-month wrangle over the future of Teck. Glencore originally sought to buy the whole company in an unsolicited $23 billion bid, but was ultimately forced to scale back its ambitions to target the Canadian miner’s coal unit instead.
The deal will pave the way for Glencore to hive off its profitable but polluting thermal coal business and focus on mining metals such as copper, nickel and zinc. The company reiterated plans to split out the combined coal operations within about two years after the deal closes.
It will also finally end Teck’s struggle to find a solution for its mines that produce coking coal — used to make steel — after years of studying various options to separate it. The company had initially planned a complicated spin off that left it paying royalties to the remaining metals business, before Glencore disrupted the plan.
Teck, which will now have no exposure to the coal business, said it will use the proceeds to pay off debts, build new metal mines and return some to shareholders.
Nippon Steel, which currently owns 2.5% in some of Teck’s coal assets, will convert the ownership and put in additional cash to take a 20% stake in the business, while Posco will convert its ownership stake in Teck mines to a 3% holding in the business.
(Updates with additional details. An earlier version corrected a company name.)