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Ivanhoe Mines Ltd T.IVN

Alternate Symbol(s):  IVPAF

Ivanhoe Mines Ltd. is a Canada-based mining, development, and exploration company. The Company is focused on the mining, development and exploration of minerals and precious metals from its property interests located primarily in Africa. Its projects include The Kamoa-Kakula Copper Complex, The Kipushi Project, The Platreef Project., and The Western Foreland Exploration Project. The Kamoa-Kakula Copper Complex project stratiform copper deposit with adjacent prospective exploration areas within the Central African Copperbelt, approximately 25 kilometers (km) west of the town of Kolwezi and about 270 km west of the provincial capital of Lubumbashi. The Kipushi mine is adjacent to the town of Kipushi in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) approximately 30 km southwest of the provincial capital of Lubumbashi. The 21 licenses in the Western Foreland cover a combined area of 1,808 square kilometers to the north, south and west of the Kamoa-Kakula Copper Complex.


TSX:IVN - Post by User

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Post by Oldnicknoron May 10, 2012 3:29am
405 Views
Post# 19893067

Mongolia May Drop Foreign Owners' Cap in Mining

Mongolia May Drop Foreign Owners' Cap in Mining

May give a boost to IVN-shares

It affects the company indirectly via the proposed Chalco-SGQ deal.

https://www.cnbc.com/id/47364946

Mongolia May Drop Foreign Owners' Cap in Mining: Sources

Published: Wednesday, 9 May 2012

The Mongolian government is set to soften a proposed foreign investment law, which seeks to impose a 49 percent cap on foreign ownership in 'strategic' assets including the country's booming mining sector, industry executives told CNBC.

"Cooler heads prevailed this week," said Jim Dwyer, Executive Director of the Business Council of Mongolia (BCM) in a telephone interview from the capital Ulan Bator on Wednesday.

A working group headed by the Deputy Speaker of Parliament informed the BCM earlier this week that it had revised the initial draft of the law to remove the most controversial aspect of the proposal, a requirement of 51 percent Mongolian government ownership.

"It's out," said Dwyer, a former global head of M&A for UBS, referring to the ownership limits. "We were thrilled when we heard what the Working Group came up with. The initial draft was draconian but it's been reworked very nicely."

The draft legislation is expected to be considered by the country's Parliament this Friday during its first reading and it could be passed “within two weeks," Dwyer said.

Investors have been questioning governance, transparency, contractual certainty and legal structures amid claims that the government is playing the national interest card by making it tougher for foreign companies to do business in the country.

Mining industry executives warned the legislation still needs to be ratified by Parliament in what has been a tense run-up to legislative elections on June 28 with pre-poll rhetoric taking on an anti-Chinese tone.

"This is just the first reading," said one Singapore-based executive with deal-making experience in Mongolia, adding that another big risk is if the post-election political landscape changes, leading to the "pro-business bureaucracy getting kicked out."

Anti-China Rhetoric

Nationalist rhetoric is taking on a heightened anti-China tone in the run-up to the polls, presenting an additional risk for the investment outlook, political analysts said.

The draft foreign investment law "would subject all foreign investors to a new layer of scrutiny, even as Chinese investments are likely to be disproportionately targeted," wrote Damien Ma, analyst at Eurasia Group on May 4. "Given China's outsized importance to the country's economic prospects, however, Mongolia is not turning away from China. But it clearly wants to counter the perception that the future of the country's mining resources is being decided in Beijing rather than in Ulaanbaatar."

Still, miners active in Mongolia are optimistic. "I imagine the law may change and there's a chance that clause is removed before it becomes actual law," said a source close to Ivanhoe Mines, one of the largest investors in Mongolia's mining sector, referring to the ownership restrictions.

The source added that in its unamended form, the required 51 percent Mongolian ownership in the draft law would "scuttle" the deal by China aluminum giant Chalco to acquire Ivanhoe's stake in SouthGobi Resources.

Toronto and NYSE-listed Ivanhoe is the majority owner of the Oyu Tolgoi mine in Mongolia. Oyu Tolgoi, which means 'Turquoise Hill', is the world's largest undeveloped gold and copper project and enters full commercial production in the first-half of 2013.

Rio Tinto, which co-develops and manages Oyu Tolgoi, has invested more than $4 billion in Ivanhoe over the past six years to position itself to take over the company founded by billionaire Robert Friedland and get its hands on the Canadian miner's 66 percent stake in the giant Mongolian mine, Reuters has reported.

Metal extracted from Oyu Tolgoi is being used to produce the 4,700 gold, silver and bronze medals that will be awarded during the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, said Rio -- the official supplier of the awards -- on its website. The metal is also coming from Rio's Kennecott Utah Copper project in the U.S.

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