Showing posts with label teck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teck. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Connemara Mining Makes Significant Zinc Find

39 per cent Zinc-Lead Deposit At Limerick Project




Shares in Irish zinc miner, Connemara Mining, leapt 36 per cent in London yesterday as the company released news of a "very significant result" in its County Limerick zinc project.

The AIM-listed explorer said it has found a 39pc combined zinc-lead deposit from the results of Hole 45 at Stonepark. Chairman John Teeling said the zinc was high grade, at a shallow depth and the discovery area extended over 500 metres.

"But, most importantly, this is a 'sweet spot', which lifts the overall metal content in the deposit to grades which allow for economic mining," Mr Teeling added.

The discovery was made during the company's drilling programme. Hole 45 hit 7.45 metres of 19.2pc zinc and 8.5pc lead -- the best intersection to date on the project -- and includes 4.25 metres of almost 39pc combined zinc-lead.

The Stonepark North programme is operated by Connemara along with Canadian minergiant Teck Resources which holds a 75 per cent stake in the project.


Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Fitch Givs Teck Resources A BBB- Rating

Teck Outlook Is Stable



The credit rating company, Fitch, has assigned a BBB- to Canadian miner and shipper, Teck Resources.

A BBB- rating is in the ‘lower medium’ rating, the 10th of Fitch’s 20 rating ranks.

Fitch says in its report that Teck’s ratings output is stable, reflecting Teck's leading positions in zinc, in the seaborne hard metallurgical coal market, and its solid core position in copper. Q4 2009 operating profits before depreciation and pricing adjustments were 39% coal, 39% copper and 22% zinc.

Adjusting the balance sheet for the sale of Teck’s one-third interest in the Wanata Dam hydroelectric facility in British Columbia, debt at Dec. 31, 2009 would be C$6.7 billion or 1.9 times 2009 operating EBITDA of C$3.4 billion. Pro forma for the transaction, Teck's cash balance would have been C$1.3 billion and scheduled debt maturities would have been C$453 million in 2010, C$432 million in 2011 and C$494 million in 2012.

Fitch expects free cash flow (operating cash flow less capital expenditures less dividends) in 2010 to be less than the C$2.7 billion generated in 2009, despite stronger earnings, on higher capital spending (C$1 billion guidance in 2010 versus C$590 million spent in 2009). Free cash generation should be at least C$ 1.1 billion in 2010 and funds from operations (FFO) adjusted leverage should decline from the actual level of 2.1 times at Dec. 31, 2009 given the focus on debt repayment coupled with stronger earnings. Teck repaid nearly C$5 billion in debt in 2009. Fitch does not expect FFO adjusted leverage to exceed 2.5x on average over the next 24 months.
Liquidity is strong with cash on hand of C$1.3 billion, internally generated cash flow and roughly C$1 billion available under credit facilities.

The report points out that Teck does have several development opportunities and therefore capital spending is expected to remain high if the outlook for commodities prices remains favorable. The company has sufficient flexibility to curtail production and delay capital spending.

Fitch points out that Teck is facing headwinds from an appeal to Red Dog's National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Permit (the NPDES Permit). Red Dog in Alaska accounts for the bulk of zinc production and generated C$473 million in operating profit before depreciation in 2009. Until the U.S. EPA issues the notice, Teck will not know whether and to what extent access to Aqqaluk, the next deposit to be mined at Red Dog, will be affected by the appeal. The current operating plan calls for continuing to mine the Main Deposit under existing permits until mid 2011. However, in order to maintain efficient production rates, Main Deposit ore will eventually need to be supplemented with ore from Aqqaluk. If permit delays extend beyond May 2010, the transition plan will be affected and production at Red Dog would likely be curtailed in October 2010. Production would not be expected to resume until the appeal is resolved and the mine can be restarted, which could take up 18 months unless the appeal is withdrawn. Fitch does not believe a temporary curtailment of Red Dog would affect the rating.

The Stable Outlook reflects Fitch's view that Teck will continue to focus on debt reduction and resume dividends at a modest level in the second half of 2010.
A negative rating action could follow from a leveraged acquisition or other recapitalizing event. A positive rating action could follow further sustainable reduction in financial leverage.

Teck owns, or has interests in, 13 mines in Canada, the U.S., Chile and Peru, as well as one metallurgical complex in Canada.





Tuesday, March 23, 2010

China Coal Imports To Exceed 30 Million Tons

Coking coal imports by China, the world’s biggest steelmaker, will exceed 30 million metric tons this year as domestic supplies can’t keep pace with demand from mills; so said Teck Resources Ltd, CEO Don Lindsay at a conference in Singapore.

With Chinese steel output continuing to rise, demand for coking coal will also increase. China’s coking coal imports rose five-fold in 2009 from 6.85 million tons to 34.4 million tons after the government closed smaller coal mines in the wake of a number of high-profile mining accidents.

“China is hungry for commodities on an unprecedented scale,” said Mr Lindsay. “Domestic supply of high-quality coking coal required will not be able to keep pace with steel production growth.”

Teck Resources is the second-largest seaborne shipper of coal and wants to boost coking coal output by 50 percent within five years, Mr Lindsay said.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

More Japanese Steelmakers Agree Quarterly Coal Contracts

In a further indication of a shift to quarterly raw materials contracts, more Japanese steelmakers have struck deals with coal miners for the April to June quarter.

JFE Holdings, Kobe Steel and Sumitomo Metal Industries have both agreed a price of $200 a tonne, up 55 percent from the deal for the previous financial year, the firms said on Wednesday. JFE and Kobe have signed deals with miners BHP, Rio and Teck Resources, while Sumitomo have agreed a deal with BHP.

While the steelmakers are all looking for a return to an annual contract from 1 July, the miners have the upper hand as they try to move to a system that reflects changes in the market, but which leaves the steelmakers exposed to greater volatility in cost and renders them exposed to the spot market.