Index  ›  business  ›  BBC
business · BBC ↗

Australia's Macarthur Coal snubs Peabody takeover bid

BBC Published May 18, 2010 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Peabody Energy’s offer for Macarthur Coal was 3.82 billion Australian dollars, equivalent to $3.44 billion U.S. dollars or £2.64 billion pounds, and was about A$250 million less than its previous bid.
3.82 AUD · Peabody offer3.44 USD · Peabody offer2.64 GBP · Peabody offermore than 250 AUD · previous bid
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The Australian government proposed a 40% tax on the profits of mining firms.
40 % · tax on mining profits
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Shares in Macarthur Coal fell by 15% on Tuesday.
15 % · Macarthur shares
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Coal prices have doubled since the beginning of 2009.
100 % · coal prices
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
China's coal imports have tripled thanks to the recovery in the steel industry.
200 % · China's coal imports
View source ↗

Australian miner Macarthur Coal has rejected a bid from US firm Peabody Energy as too low - seemingly ending a bidding war for the firm.

Peabody's 3.82bn Australian dollar ($3.44bn; £2.64bn) offer was about A$250m less than it had previously bid.

That lower offer came after the Australian government proposed a 40% tax on the profits of mining firms.

Macarthur had already rejected Peabody's first two offers and advances from Australia's New Hope.

Instead, Macarthur wanted to buy rival Gloucester Coal - though that was scuppered when Gloucester's major shareholder would not back the offer.

Shares in Macarthur fell by 15% on Tuesday - close to levels seen before Peabody's first bid.

Coal prices have doubled since the beginning of 2009.

China's coal imports have tripled thanks to the recovery in the steel industry - which uses coal - as the global economy recovers from recession.

Macarthur is the world's largest producer of pulverised injection coal - the type used in steel making.

Earlier this month, the Australian government proposed a new tax on the profits of major resources companies, as part of a wider review of its tax policy.

The proposal hit share prices of mining firms and led to an angry reaction from the industry, which is widely seen as having driven Australia's growth and kept it out of recession.

This article was originally published by BBC ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error