A $1 billion metals deal by blank-cheque fund ACG Acquisition Co has been terminated following delays when the different sides, which included a leading global miner and top automakers as anchor investors, tried to revise it, ACG said on Thursday.
ACG (ACGa.L), a London-listed special purpose acquisition
company (SPAC), planned to buy a nickel mine and a copper mine from Appian
Capital, betting on rising demand for metals needed for the global green energy
transition.
In June, global miner Glencore (GLEN.L), Chrysler parent
Stellantis (STLAM.MI) and Volkswagen's (VOWG_p.DE) battery unit PowerCo agreed
to back the deal through an equity investment. It was expected to close in
August.
"ACG announces today that, despite its best efforts,
revisions to the Acquisition Agreement have not been agreed and the Acquisition
Agreement has been terminated," ACG said in a statement.
ACG, Appian and Glencore declined to comment.
There was a lack of interest from minority investors at the
stage of the $300-million equity offering which ACG planned as part of the
deal, despite the presence of Stellantis and Glencore as anchor investors,
several sources told Reuters.
Weak economic data from the world's largest metals consumer
China, which it has reported since August, affected the investors' appetite for
the deal, a source, directly familiar with the situation, told Reuters.
Nickel prices slumped by 37% since the start of 2023, while
copper is down 2%.
"The deal fell apart over price," said another
source familiar with the situation, adding the price was higher than the buyers
considered realistic after the nickel price declined.
Appian Capital wanted the deal that was originally agreed
and on the table, while one of the anchor investors sought to change their
position, the third source said.
One of the buyers indeed sought to renegotiate the terms,
but only after ACG's equity raise stumbled upon weak interest from investors,
according to the fourth source.
SPACs are shell companies that raise money via an initial
public offering (IPO) and later merge with a private company, taking it public.
ACG would have been the first mining SPAC listing in London.
A year ago, Appian began legal proceedings in a $1.2-billion
claim against South Africa's Sibanye-Stillwater (SSWJ.J) after Sibanye pulled
out of a deal to acquire the same two mines
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