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Anglo CEO says he can run sprawling miner better than any activist

Duncan Wanblad is first South African to run the company since Tony Trahar stepped down in 2007. (Image courtesy of )

Anglo American Plc鈥檚 boss said he鈥檚 the best person to reshape the century-old miner 鈥 if needed 鈥 as slumping commodity prices pressure its sprawling operations and spark murmurs about activist intervention.

The company stunned shareholders in December when it announced deep production cuts to reduce costs, wiping out almost a fifth of its market value in just one day. While problems at its platinum and iron ore operations in South Africa had been well publicized, big output drops from its flagship copper business in South America came as a surprise.

Anglo says that reset puts it in a position to focus on getting more profit from the less metal it mines. But the scale of the operational snarls has heightened focus on the company鈥檚 leadership 鈥 both for executives and the board 鈥 with speculation lingering that it could be a target for activist investors.

Responding to that, chief executive officer Duncan Wanblad says it鈥檚 鈥渞eally important鈥 that he can deliver value that鈥檚 in excess of whatever an activist would think it is, especially with such a complex portfolio.

鈥淚鈥檓 not sure many people understand that and how to actually bring the value out,鈥 the CEO said in an interview in Cape Town. 鈥淏ut I do, and the people in this company do, and they will get on and get it done.鈥

Anglo鈥檚 production pullback has led some investors and analysts to call for more action, from selling assets to bringing in a partner or slowing spending at a giant fertilizer mine it鈥檚 building in England. While there鈥檚 no need to do that for now, Wanblad said he鈥檚 prepared to take more steps to reshape the business should slumping commodity prices persist.

鈥淎s it鈥檚 set out today we can get through it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t depends very much on the cash generation.鈥

Still, the producer continues to be hampered by falling prices of the diamonds and platinum metals it mines, while copper and nickel prices are also under pressure.

鈥淭he longer that goes on, the more action we we will take,鈥 Wanblad said. Anglo would look first at operating costs and then its capital spending, he said.

The production woes have added to a list of problems that Wanblad, who has held the top job for almost two years, was already facing. He stepped into the role with a guage of commodity prices at a record, though the market has since slumped. The company鈥檚 portfolio has also been hit by issues from extreme weather to a breakdown in crucial infrastructure in South Africa.

Its biggest problem is its Los Bronces mine in Chile. Like many of the industry鈥檚 biggest copper mines, the operation is more than 100 years old and Anglo is now struggling with hard ore that contains low grades of metal. Rather than mine this expensive-to-process ore, the company has decided to wait until it can blend it with higher grade material. Unfortunately for Anglo, that will take several years.

(By Thomas Biesheuvel)

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