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Newmont Mining Corporation

 
Hoover's Profile: Newmont Mining Corporation
(NYSE:NEM)
Company Financials
Income Statement
Balance Sheet
Cash Flow Statement

Contact Information
Newmont Mining Corporation
6363 S. Fiddler's Green Cir.
Greenwood Village, CO 80111
CO Tel. 303-863-7414
Toll Free 800-810-6463
Fax 303-837-5837

Type: Public
On the web: http://www.newmont.com
Employees: 15,450
Employee growth: 3.0%

Newmont Mining certainly goes for the gold. The company is among the world's top gold producers (with Barrick ahead of AngloGold Ashanti and Gold Fields), following acquisitions in Canada, Bolivia, and Australia. Newmont produces some 6 million ounces of gold annually; it has proved and probable reserves of more than 85 million ounces of gold. Other metals that the company mines include copper, silver, and zinc. Operations in North America and South America account for about half of Newmont's production. It also has mining facilities in Australia, Indonesia, New Zealand, and Uzbekistan.

Key numbers for fiscal year ending December, 2008:
Sales: $6,199.0M
One year growth: 12.2%
Net income: $853.0M

Officers:
Chairman: Vincent A. Calarco
President, CEO, and Director: Richard T. O'Brien
EVP and CFO: Russell D. Ball

Competitors:
AngloGold Ashanti
Barrick Gold
Gold Fields

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Incorporated: 1921 as Newmont Corporation
NAIC: 212221 Gold Ore Mining; 212234 Copper Ore and Nickel Ore Mining
SIC: 1041 Gold Ores; 1021 Copper Ores; 1061 Ferroalloy Ores Except Vanadium

Newmont Mining Corporation is one of the world's leading gold companies, with operations or assets in the United States, Australia, Peru, Indonesia, Bolivia, New Zealand, Mexico, Canada, and Ghana. It is the only gold company included in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index, Fortune 500, and Dow Jones Sustainability Index-World. As of December 31, 2007, the company had proven and probable equity gold reserves of 86.5 million ounces. Newmont also produces copper, primarily at its Batu Hijau project in Indonesia, and zinc.

Early Years

Newmont Mining Corporation was founded in 1921 as Newmont Corporation by Colonel William Boyce Thompson as a type of holding company for his varied financial interests. Thompson was born in 1869 in Alder Gulch, Montana, and grew up in Butte. An overweight, cigar-smoking man with a penchant for gambling (a telling hobby for someone in his line of work), Thompson eventually landed at the Columbia School of Mines, after which he made some money in the coal business. Upon selling stock in a copper mine he had bought on installments, Thompson arrived around 1905 on Wall Street where he became a successful trader, making gains in several industries, including oil, steel, and minerals. Newmont's early strategy was to establish development companies and then to sell off much of their stock. The remaining stock was accumulated in a portfolio whose income was used to finance further mining projects. Thompson had a hand in launching several companies, including Magma Copper and Texas Gulf Sulphur, but his standard policy was to make a quick profit on a new venture and to move on to the next one.

Newmont stock reached a peak of $236 in 1929, but crashed with the rest of the stock market and dropped to $37 in 1930. Thompson died the same year, never fully recovering from surgery to reduce his obesity. His personal attorney, Charles F. Ayer, took over as head of Newmont, and the company began to retain its acquired properties rather than perpetuating its earlier cycle of trading them off. Among the companies Newmont acquired in the years prior to World War II were O'okiep Copper Company, Ltd., of South Africa, and Colorado's Idarado Mining Corporation. Also launched during this period was Newmont Oil Company, whose aim was to explore Texas and Louisiana for oil reserves.

Expanding Domestically and Globally

By 1940, Newmont existed as an interesting hybrid of holding company and operating company. As a holding company, Newmont's investments were primarily in well-known metal and mining companies, with copper leading the way. These investments included hundreds of thousands of shares of Kennecott, Phelps Dodge, and Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting. Gold represented about 19 percent of the company's total investments. Among the significant ventures that Newmont was actively developing were O'okiep, in which Newmont held a two-thirds interest; Getch Mine, Inc., a Nevada gold mine, 18.6 percent held by Newmont; and Alder Oil Company, a wholly owned subsidiary.

Through O'okiep, Newmont launched successful ventures in southern Africa. Abandoned by its British owners, O'okiep was acquired by Newmont for the modest investment of $2 million, and Newmont subsequently took advantage of the increased demand for copper during World War II. After the war, due to high costs and a labor shortage in the United States, Newmont decided to concentrate its prospecting abroad. The result was the acquisition of an abandoned copper-lead-zinc mine at Tsumeb in the former colony of German South West Africa.

The German owners had collected an extremely rich ore at the mine, and when the site was seized in 1939 by South Africa's Custodian of Enemy Property about 800,000 tons of the ore had been left at the surface. Newmont teamed with American Metal Company and five other partners for a bid of just over $4 million, with Newmont's share at 29 percent. Tsumeb's ore reserves turned out to be much greater than anyone (including its former German operators) had imagined, and the purchase price was covered by merely processing the ore that had been dumped at the surface.

By 1950, Newmont was led by Fred Searls who, like Thompson, was a recognizable figure on Wall Street. Known for his red bow tie and yellow-topped boots, Searls disliked publicity and preferred ore exploration to sitting in an office. During this time, Newmont became involved with lucrative Sherritt Gordon Mines of Canada.

In 1951, John Drybrough, president of the Newmont Mining Corporation of Canada subsidiary, informed Newmont officials that a company run by his brother-in-law had discovered nickel deposits in Manitoba, as well as a new, more efficient method for processing the ore. With the backing of J.P. Morgan and Company, Metropolitan Life, and several other insurance companies, Newmont went ahead with the project and invested $10 million in the mining company. Eventually Sherritt Gordon became one of the largest producers of nickel in the world.

Plato Malozemoff Becomes President

Plato Malozemoff became Newmont's president in 1954, beginning a 34-year period of leadership and growth. That year the company was valued at $147 million. When Malozemoff retired in 1986, Newmont was a global corporation with a market capitalization of $2.3 billion.

The son of a mining engineer, Malozemoff was born in 1909 in St. Petersburg, Russia, where his father was managing director of British-owned Lena Goldfields, Ltd., the largest gold-mining company in Russia until its seizure by the Soviets in 1920. The Malozemoff family eventually landed in San Francisco, where Plato earned a degree in mining engineering at Berkeley in 1931. After receiving his master's degree from the Montana School of Mines, Malozemoff assisted his father in the management of gold and copper mines in Argentina and Costa Rica.

He was first noticed by Newmont executives around 1943 while working for the Office of Price Administration's minerals branch in Washington, D.C., and was hired by Newmont in 1945 as an entry-level engineer. One of the driving forces behind the Sherritt Gordon deal, Malozemoff was made a vice-president as the project successfully unfolded.

Under Malozemoff's leadership, Newmont entered a period of steady growth by acquisition and diversification, often through joint ventures with other well-established companies. In 1955, Newmont joined Phelps Dodge, American Smelting and Refining, and Cerro de Pasco in forming the Southern Peru Copper Corporation. That same year, a uranium oxide mine was opened in Washington State with the company's majority interest in the Dawn Mining Company. Newmont also bought a 28.8 percent share in the development of a South African copper mine with Rio Tinto in Transvaal, South Africa. In 1955, a particularly active year, investments were also made in the Philippines, Canada, and Algeria. In 1957, Empire Star Mines Company, Ltd., was merged into Newmont.

Domestic Investments Increase

At the end of the 1950s, Newmont began to reverse its trend toward reliance on foreign investment. In 1959, $8.2 million of the company's $13 million dividend income came from foreign holdings, primarily the mines of Tsumeb and O'okiep. Newmont took action to remedy this imbalance in 1962 by trading some of its own preferred stock for a large block of stock in Magma Copper.

With this deal, Newmont's interest in Magma was raised to 80.6 percent, and suddenly the company's income from domestic holdings surpassed its foreign-generated total. Following the acquisition of additional Magma shares, Newmont was forced by the U.S. Justice Department to divest its 2.9 percent interest in Phelps Dodge on the grounds that holdings in both large copper companies violated antitrust laws. Newmont complied, and also removed two Phelps Dodge representatives from its own board of directors.

By the middle of the 1960s, over half of Newmont's income originated in North America. Most of this was in the United States, largely due to the 1965 opening of the company's new mine at Carlin, Nevada. The mine, operated by Carlin Gold Mining Company (a wholly owned subsidiary of Newmont), began operations in April 1965, producing 128,500 ounces of gold by year-end. The output was doubled the following year and Carlin quickly became the second largest gold producer in the nation, trailing only the 90-year-old Homestake Mine, also in Nevada.

More amazing than Carlin's size was the technology used to collect its difficult-to-obtain riches. In 1966, 12 tons of overburden had to be removed and 3 tons of ore milled to retrieve an ounce of gold at Carlin. Furthermore, the gold particles were the smallest ever mined, requiring an electron microscope to be seen. Despite these obstacles, Carlin became the lowest-cost gold mine in the Western world, a fact reflected in Newmont's earnings figures, which rose to $5.15 share in 1966.

Malozemoff Becomes Chairman of the Board

Malozemoff became Newmont's chairman of the board in 1966, reinforcing his position as the company's main visionary force. Between 1965 and 1967, Malozemoff and Newmont quadrupled the sum spent by the company on exploration, reaching $4.4 million in 1966. The company's Palabora Mine in South Africa also came into production in early 1966 and began paying dividends by the end of the year. Between Palabora, Tsumeb, and O'okiep, Newmont realized dividends approaching $20 million from its southern African properties. Toward the end of 1966 and into 1967, Newmont acquired a 33 percent interest in Foote Mineral Company, a major producer of iron alloys and lithium products.

Several Newmont ventures in the 1960s, however, were unsuccessful. A lead-zinc mine in Algeria became nationalized by the government; Granduc Mine, an underground copper project in Canada, encountered a series of costly construction and development delays, including an avalanche that dumped 50,000 tons of snow on the work camp and killed 26 laborers; and a joint venture with Cerro Corporation, Atlantic Cement Company, failed to turn a profit for several years, running into alternating problems with machinery and labor.

In 1969 Newmont merged completely with Magma Copper, of which it already owned 80.6 percent. Magma's minority stockholders were issued Newmont convertible preferred stock in exchange for their shares. With earnings of over $26 million at the time of the merger, Magma was the fourth largest domestic copper producer, and by 1970 about three-fourths of Newmont's revenue came from copper. The company's strategy of shifting away from reliance on foreign sources continued; by 1970, U.S. and Canadian investments accounted for 65 percent of Newmont's net income. Many in the industry considered this a positive development, since the early 1970s were a period of increased mine nationalization as well as political machinations that made foreign investments riskier than usual.

Focus as an Operating Company

Newmont's direction in the 1970s was toward becoming more of an operating company and less of a holding company. An ambitious expansion program was undertaken at Magma, which quickly became Newmont's chief source of revenues, accounting for about 36 percent in 1972.

This expansion was largely accomplished by investing around $90 million in 1971 in two Arizona locations, Superior and San Manuel, including $18 million for a new electrolytic copper refinery at San Manuel. The expansion raised the combined output of San Manuel and Superior to 145,000 tons of copper in 1972. By that same year, 78 percent of Newmont's net income was generated by companies operating inside Canada and the United States. Foreign interests contributed about 28 percent of the company's revenues, with Tsumeb, O'okiep, Palabora, and Southern Peru Copper leading the way.

The 1970s were a roller-coaster decade for Newmont. Technical problems plagued the new smelter at San Manuel in 1972, and new antipollution laws required the installation of another $30 million worth of equipment. By 1973, however, these and other problems were largely solved. Labor problems at Granduc improved, and Newmont's other Canadian mine, Similkameen, enjoyed a smooth first year of operation, producing near its capacity.

In 1974, Newmont set a net earnings record of $113.6 million. That same year, the company paid $28.5 million to increase its interest in Foote Mineral Company to 83 percent of voting shares. The Foote acquisition gave Newmont control of the noncommunist world's largest deposit of spodumene ore (used to produce lithium), located at Kings Mountain, North Carolina.

Between 1975 and 1978 copper prices plummeted, dropping from $1.55 a pound in 1974 to as low as 50 cents, resulting in the selling price of copper falling below its production cost in the United States. In 1977, Newmont led a consortium of six companies in purchasing Peabody Coal Company from Kennecott, which had been ordered in 1971 by the Federal Trade Commission to divest itself of what was the largest coal producer in the United States. Newmont's share in the consortium, which called itself Peabody Holding Company, was 27.5 percent. With copper prices in free-fall, however, Newmont's net income declined to $5.1 million in 1977, a drop in earnings also affected by a $15 million strike at Peabody and the closing of the Granduc mine.

Recovery and New Directions

Newmont recovered somewhat toward the end of the 1970s. Costs were cut by suspending operations at Idarado Mining Company of which Newmont owned 80 percent, as well as at the Gamsberg zinc project, a South African joint venture. In April 1978, the end of the nationwide coal strike also allowed Peabody to become profitable once again. The Newmont Oil subsidiary began to benefit from the price deregulation of new natural gas, and higher gold prices were beneficial to the wholly owned Carlin operation. Even the often sluggish Atlantic Cement Company showed a profit in 1978 after losing about $400,000 the previous year.

By 1979 gold was beginning to play an increasingly important role for Newmont. With high gold prices, it took only 30 months for the Telfer gold mine (70 percent owned by Newmont) in Australia's Great Sandy Desert to pay back the $23.5 million laid out in development costs. In fact, Newmont earned more from gold in 1979 than it had from all its operations the year before.

In 1980, Newmont began processing gold ore from its Maggie Creek mine, 14 miles south of the main area of the Carlin operation. The open pit orebodies at Maggie Creek were estimated at 4.8 million tons of ore containing about 440,000 ounces of gold. Then, less than a mile from Maggie Creek, Newmont discovered Gold Quarry (the 20th century's most important gold strike), which was estimated to contain over eight million ounces of gold.

In 1981, while Newmont was still assessing the importance of the Gold Quarry discovery, shares of Newmont were being acquired by Consolidated Gold Fields plc (CGF), a British mining company. Malozemoff was able to reach an agreement with CGF under which CGF would end up holding 26 percent interest in Newmont, but would not attempt to increase that share. This agreement was changed in 1983, allowing CGF up to a 33.3 percent interest in Newmont as well as a maximum of three representatives on Newmont's board instead of the previous limit of two.

Also in 1983 Newmont purchased the Miami, Arizona, copper operations of City Service Company. The operations included the Pinto Valley open pit mine, whose annual capacity rated about 70,000 tons of copper contained in concentrate.

Changes in the Eighties

Malozemoff ended his long tenure as Newmont's chief executive officer in September 1985 and was succeeded by Gordon R. Parker, who had been named company president ten months earlier as well as president and chief executive officer of Magma. Malozemoff, 75 years old at the time, retained his chairmanship of Newmont's board.

In October 1985 Newmont reorganized its management structure, consolidating its operations into four groups headed by executives with global responsibility: nonferrous metals under David C. Ridinger; Carlin Gold Mining Company and the company's 70 percent interest in Telfer gold mine under T. Peter Philip; lithium and industrial minerals under Thomas A. Williams; and energy operations, including Peabody and Newmont Oil, under Edward P. Fontaine.

Carlin Gold Mining Company's name was changed to Newmont Gold Company in 1986. The following year, corporate raider T. Boone Pickens and his investment group, Ivanhoe Partners, attempted a takeover of Newmont, making an offer of $95-a-share for the 90 percent of Newmont they did not already control. The takeover attempt was thwarted, however, when in one day CGF raised its share of the company up to 47.7 percent, a move made possible by Newmont's announcement of a $33-a-share dividend payment as part of a new restructuring plan.

In order to compensate for the cash drain the payout created, Newmont began selling its properties. Magma Copper was spun off to Newmont shareholders, saving Newmont the costs of modernizing Magma's facilities. At the end of 1987, the company sold its 80 percent interest in Foote Mineral for about $74 million. Another $350 million was brought in by the sale of Newmont's 4.2 million shares of Du Pont stock. Finally, all four mines in South Africa held by Newmont were sold for $125 million.

Focusing on Gold

The main consequence of Newmont's restructuring was the shift of the company's focus to gold exclusively. In 1988, the company sold its interests in Newmont Oil and in both Canadian ventures, Sherritt Gordon and Similkameen. With the 1990 sale of its 55 percent interest in Peabody, Newmont had shed virtually all of its non-gold holdings and was the largest gold producer in North America. In 1991, a merger was arranged, and then collapsed, between Newmont and American Barrick Resources. American Barrick had acquired a 49 percent interest in Newmont in a deal the previous year with Hanson plc, which had acquired the shares when it took over CGF in 1989.

Exploration and Acquisitions

In 1992, Newmont continued to actively explore for gold, both in North America and abroad. A joint venture was agreed upon with the Republic of Uzbekistan for producing gold at Muruntau, and similar gold exploration ventures were initiated with Costa Rica, Thailand, Peru, and Indonesia. In the United States Newmont acquired the rights to two prospective gold properties, Grassy Mountain in Oregon and Musgrove Creek in Idaho.

Gordon Parker retired in 1993 and Ronald C. Cambre assumed the CEO position. Within a year, Newmont Mining Corp and Newmont Gold Company combined assets to form a unified gold company with combined gold reserves of 26 million ounces of gold. This made the unified company the sixth largest gold producer in the world.

In 1997, Newmont Mining acquired Santa Fe Pacific Gold Corporation for $2.43 billion in stock. That same year, Newmont started the Batu Hijau copper mine project in Indonesia, with an initial investment of $1.9 billion. In October 1998, Newmont Mining bought the remaining outstanding shares of Newmont Gold creating a single, merged organization. The following year, Wayne Murdy became president. He added the CEO position in 2000 and was named chairman in 2002.

During the early part of the decade gold prices were down, bringing less than $300 an ounce. This affected mining companies' income and profits, including Newmont, which suffered losses. The company closed exploration offices around the globe and cut its exploration budget. However, low gold prices also made it less expensive to acquire other mining companies. In 2001, Newmont completed its merger with Battle Mountain Gold Company and remained the second largest gold producer in the world. That purchase brought Newmont the Phoenix project in Nevada as well as assets in Canada, Bolivia, and Australia.

Rising Market Prices in a Risky Business

Gold prices improved in 2002, rising above $300 per ounce for the first time in two years. That year, Newmont bought Normandy Mining, an Australian company, along with its largest shareholder, Franco-Nevada Mining Company, for $5.2 billion. The deal brought Newmont two mines in Ghana and made Newmont the world's largest gold mining company at that time, with proven gold reserves of 88 million ounces and 8.2 million ounces in production.

The company's strategy at this time was to operate in a big way in just a few locations. Its major projects, including Northern Nevada, Yanacocha in Peru, and Batu Higau in Indonesia, involved big production areas, not just a single mine.

However, gold mining was a messy and risky business. To get the gold out required taking mountains apart, crushing the rock, putting it in piles, then using cyanide to leach the gold molecules out. According to a 2007 article in Mother Jones, it took at least 20 tons of waste and 13 pounds of toxic emissions to mine enough gold to make a one-third ounce 18-karat ring. The problem for mining companies was getting rid of these wastes and emissions without polluting the land around the mines or harming the health of the people living nearby. Local communities also became concerned about displacement of people once the mining actually began. Newmont faced challenges from governments and from environmental groups about the issues.

Seeking New Reserves

In 2006, as the price of gold rose above $500 per ounce, companies were eager to find new reserves. Newmont began producing gold and copper at its Phoenix sites in Nevada, and Richard O'Brien, Newmont's new president and CEO, announced the company would be focusing on improving its declining gold production.

To that end, Newmont planned to bring three more mines into production by 2009 in addition to the Phoenix operations. In 2007, it also closed its merchant banking business and ended its hedging practice, which had involved betting that gold prices would not continue to rise. The difference between the sale of its merchant banking and the cost of buying back its hedges left the company with some $1.9 billion for capital expenditures, including acquisitions. Shortly afterward, Newmont announced it was buying Miramar Mining Corp., a Canadian company, for $1.5 billion. That deal would bring Newmont the Hope Bay project, which included at least three gold deposits.

At the end of 2007, the average cost of mining an ounce of gold was around $400, up from $250 in 2001. The price of gold was increasing, going above $900 an ounce in 2008. With its extensive holdings and joint ventures, including the large gold system found at the Moorilda project in New South Wales, Australia, Newmont continued to focus on low-cost, long-life projects. Its geographic diversification provided some protection from geopolitical risks and it was once again branching out to include other metals, including copper and zinc.

Principal Subsidiaries

Newmont USA Ltd.; Newmont Mining B.C. Ltd.; Newmont Canada Ltd.; Newmont Capital Ltd.; Resurrection Mining Company; Newmont Yandal Operation Pty. Ltd.; Newmont Australia Ltd.; Idarado Mining Company (80.1%); P.T. Newmont Minahasa Raya (80%); Minera Yanacocha S.R.L. (51.35%); Dawn Mining Company LLC (51%).

Principal Competitors

Barrick Gold Corporation; Anglogold Ashanti Ltd.; Gold Fields Ltd.

Further Reading

"Alkane Resources Confirms Large Gold System in Australia," AsiaPulse News, February 18, 2008.

Anreder, Steven S., "Newmont Poised for '73 Recovery," Barron's, December 4, 1972.

Aven, Paula, "Newmont's Top Cop," Denver Business Journal, October 22, 1999, p. 1.

Bagli, Charles V., "Newmont Wins Santa Fe, with Further Gold Deals Expected," New York Times, March 11, 1997, p. D1.

Berman, Phyllis, "Will Copper Outshine Gold?" Forbes, November 26, 1979.

Bogoslaw, David, "Newmont Clips Its Hedges," Business Week Online, July 9, 2007, p. 19.

Botta, Mike, "Two Mining Firms Draw Closer," American Metal Market, November 3, 1983.

Brandon, Keith, "A Diversified Investment in Minerals," Barron's, May 26, 1941.

"Carlin Gold Mining Will Develop Its Maggie Creek Deposits," Engineering and Mining Journal, October 1980.

Case, David, "Mr. Clean," Mother Jones, September-October 2007, pp. 66+.

Davis, Jo Ellen, "One Swallow Could Make Pickens' Summer," Business Week, September 14, 1987.

"The Engineer Who's Domesticating Newmont," Business Week, October 5, 1974.

Fathi, Vahid, "Newmont Mining NEM," Morningstar Analyst Report, December 13, 2007.

"From Shotguns to Rifles," Forbes, June 15, 1971.

"Gold Fields or Mine Field?" Forbes, April 2, 1990.

Guerriere, Alison, "Newmont Mining Blames Loss on Weaker Prices, Lower Sales," American Metal Market, May 4, 2001, p. 5.

Guzzardi, Walter, "The Huge Find in Roy Ash's Backyard," Fortune, December 27, 1982.

Jordan, Carol L., "Newmont Mining Reorganizes and Consolidates Management," American Metal Market, October 3, 1985.

Knight, Danielle, "Environment: Mining Watchdog Warns Investors About Gold Giant," Environment Bulletin, February 8, 2001.

MacRae, Robert M., "Resourceful Investor," Barron's, July 31, 1967.

Maresca, Stephen, "Bright Copper Outlook Adds Luster to Newmont Mining," Barron's, November 27, 1978.

Mullins, Luke, Katy Marquardt, and Kirk Shinkle, "Return to a Golden Age," U.S. News & World Report, December 31, 2007, pp. 34-35.

"Newmont, Indonesia Reach Deal to End Civil Suit in Pollution Row," American Metal Market, February 17, 2006, p. 2.

"Newmont Mining a Sound Value," Financial World, July 1, 1970.

"Newmont Mining and Battle Mountain Gold to Merge," E&MJ: Engineering & Mining Journal, August 2000, pp. 13+.

"Newmont Mining CEO Murdy to Retire," Denver Rocky Mountain News, June 6, 2007, p. 8 Business.

"Newmont Mining Corporation," Wall Street Transcript, December 23, 2002, pp. 81-83.

"Newmont Mining Corporation," 2007 Form 10-K, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, March 18, 2008.

"Newmont Mining's Fourth Generation of Gamblers," Fortune, October 1965.

"Newmont to Acquire Miramar Mining for $1.5 Billion," E&MJ, November 2007, pp. 10, 12.

"Newmont's Vindication," Wall Street Journal--Eastern Edition, December 26, 2007, p. A10.

"Peabody Terms Told," Chemical Week, December 8, 1976.

Rudnitsky, Howard, "Sir Jimmy's Busted Deal," Forbes, August 19, 1991.

------, "Sir Jimmy's Golden Deal," Forbes, July 8, 1991.

Sherman, Joseph V., "Over the Rainbow," Barron's, October 2, 1967.

Staebler, Jonathon, "Peak Results on Tap for Newmont Mining," Barron's, November 5, 1973.

"Striking Gold," American Executive, June 2007, pp. 122+.

Sudrajat, Deden, "Indonesia Cabinet to Decide on Newmont's Mining Contract," Dow Jones Newswire, February 20, 2008.

Viani, Laura, "Newmont Clones Itself into Twins," American Metal Market, December 10, 1993, p. 2.

"Wayne Murdy of Newmont Mining Corp: All That Glitters," Institutional Investor International Edition, March 2002, pp. 20+.

Welling, Kathryn M., "After the Raid," Barron's, June 6, 1988.

"Will It Recover on My Watch?" Forbes, December 1, 1997, pp. 98-100.

Yafie, Roberta C., "Newmont Gaining N. American Edge," American Metal Market, June 23, 2000, pp. 1+.

------, "Newmont Mining Agrees to Buy Cities Service Ariz. Copper Operations," American Metal Market, December 3, 1982.

— Robert R. Jacobson; Updated by Ellen Wernick


Wikipedia: Newmont Mining Corporation
Top
Newmont Mining Corporation
Type Public (NYSENEM)
Founded 1916
Headquarters Denver, Colorado, USA
Key people Richard T. O'Brien, CEO
Industry Gold
Revenue $5.526 billion USD (2007)
Operating income $391 million USD (2007)
Net income $1.886 billion USD (2007)
Employees 15,000 (2007)
Website http://www.newmont.com

Newmont Mining Corporation (NYSENEM), based in Denver, Colorado, USA, is one of the world's largest producers of gold, with active mines in, Nevada, Indonesia, Australia, New Zealand, Ghana, and Peru. Some smaller operations include Bolivia, Mexico, and Canada. Holdings include Battle Mountain Gold, Normandy Mining, and Franco-Nevada Corp. Newmont also has many joint venture relationships. As of December 31, 2006, Newmont produced approximately 5.9 million equity ounces of gold annually and held reserves of about 94 million of those equity ounces. Production in the Americas accounts for about 70% of the company's equity ounces, but even so, Newmont is the largest gold mining company in Australia. Newmont employs approximately 15,000 people worldwide. Other metals that the company mines include copper and silver.

Contents

History

Early years

Newmont Mining Corporation was founded in 1921 in New York by Colonel William Boyce Thompson as a holding company to invest in worldwide mineral, oil, and relations companies. The name Newmont was chosen by Thompson as a contraction of New York, and Montana, because, as one biographer put it, "he grew up in the latter and made his money in the former."

In 1929, Newmont became a mining company with its first gold product in by acquiring California's Empire Star Mine. By 1939, Newmont was operating 12 gold mines in North America.

The company acquired interests overseas. For decades around the middle of the twentieth century Newmont had a controlling interest in the Tsumeb mine in Namibia and in the O'Okiep Copper Company in Namaqualand, South Africa.

Beginning in 1925, Newmont acquired interests in a Texas oil field. Eventually, Newmont's oil interests included more than 70 blocks in the Louisiana Gulf area and oil and gas production in the North Sea.

Newmont discovered dispersed gold at Carlin, Nevada in 1962 and began operating its first mill there in 1965 under the name Carlin Gold Mining Company. The "Carlin Trend" is the largest gold discovery in North America during the 20th century. In 1971, Newmont began using the heap leaching technology on sub-mill grade ores at Carlin. It was one of the first in the gold industry to use heap leaching. In 1986, the company's name was changed to Newmont Gold Company, and five million shares were sold publicly for US$47.5 million. Newmont Mining held a 90 percent interest.

A decade later, Newmont's assets were over US$1.9 billion and income from continuing operations reached US$338 million. In August 1987, Newmont became the target of a failed, unsolicited tender offer for control and dismemberment of the company.

Major growth

After 1987, the company undertook major restructuring. This included the payment of a US$33 per share dividend to all shareholders for a total of US$2.2 billion, of which US$1.75 billion was borrowed. To reduce this debt the company undertook a divestment program involving all of its copper, oil, gas, and coal interests.

As a further step in the restructuring, the company moved its headquarters from New York City to Denver in February 1989. On January 1, 1994, Newmont Mining Corporation, and Newmont Gold Company combined assets to form a unified worldwide gold company. Shareholders of both companies had identical interests in the reserves, production, and earnings of Newmont Gold's operations.

Newmont merged with Santa Fe Pacific Gold Corporation (a former Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway subsidiary, sold in preparation for the merger that produced the BNSF Railway[1]) to form North America's largest gold producer. And, in October 1998, Newmont Mining and Newmont Gold merged, with Newmont Mining acquiring the remaining shares of Newmont Gold that were outstanding at that time. On June 21, 2000, Newmont announced a merger with Battle Mountain Gold Company. The merger was completed in January 2001.

In February 2002, Newmont completed the acquisition of Normandy Mining Limited and Franco-Nevada Mining Corporation Limited, making it the world's largest gold producer, at that time. Today, Newmont remains the only gold company in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index.

Operations

Nevada

Newmont has been mining gold in Nevada since 1965. Nevada operations include Carlin, located west of the city of Elko on the geologic feature known as the Carlin Trend, the Twin Creeks mine, located approximately 15 miles (24 km) north of Golconda, the Lone Tree Complex near the town of Valmy, and the Midas mine near the town of the same name. Newmont also participates in the Turquoise Ridge joint venture with Barrick Gold, which utilizes mill capacity at Twin Creeks. The Phoenix gold/copper project, located 10 miles (16 km) south of Battle Mountain, commenced commercial production in the fourth quarter of 2006. The Leeville underground mine, located on the Carlin Trend northwest of the Carlin East underground mine, also commenced commercial production in the fourth quarter of 2006.

Yanacocha, Peru

The properties of Minera Yanacocha S.R.L. (“Yanacocha”) are located approximately 375 miles (604 kilometers) north of Lima and 30 miles (48 kilometers) north of Cajamarca, in Peru. Yanacocha began production in 1993. Newmont holds a 51.35% interest in Yanacocha with the remaining interest held by Compañia de Minas Buenaventura, S.A.A. (43.65%) and the International Finance Corporation (5%). Yanacocha’s mining rights consist of concessions granted by the Peruvian government to Yanacocha and a related entity. Yanacocha currently has two active open pit mines, Cerro Yanacocha and La Quinua. In addition, reclamation and/or backfilling activities at Carachugo, San Jose and Maqui Maqui are currently underway. Yanacocha has four leach pads and three processing facilities. Yanacocha’s gold sales for 2006 totaled 2.6 million ounces (1.3 million equity ounces).

Australia/New Zealand

Pajingo. Pajingo (100% owned) is an underground mine located approximately 93 miles (150 kilometers) southwest of Townsville, Queensland and 45 miles (72 kilometers) south of the local township of Charters Towers. In 2006, Pajingo sold 174,600 ounces of gold. The mine was sold off in late 2007.

Jundee. The Jundee operations (100% owned) is situated approximately 435 miles (700 kilometers) northeast of Perth, Western Australia. Jundee sold 305,400 ounces of gold in 2006.

Tanami. The Tanami operations (100% owned) include The Granites treatment plant and associated mining operations, which are located in the Northern Territory approximately 342 miles (550 kilometers) northwest of Alice Springs, adjacent to the Tanami highway, and the Dead bullock Soak mining operations, approximately 25 miles (40 kilometers) west of The Granites. The Tanami operations have been wholly-owned since April 2003, when Newmont acquired the minority interests.

Kalgoorlie. The Kalgoorlie operations comprise the Fimiston open pit (commonly referred to as the Super Pit) and Mt. Charlotte underground mine at Kalgoorlie-Boulder, 373 miles (600 kilometers) east of Perth. The mines are managed by Kalgoorlie Consolidated Gold Mines Pty Ltd for the joint venture owners, Newmont and Barrick, each of which holds a 50% interest. The Super Pit is Australia’s largest gold mine in terms of gold production and annual mining volume. During 2006, the Kalgoorlie operations sold 332,200 equity ounces of gold.

Martha. The Martha operations (100% owned) are located within the town of Waihi, located approximately 68 miles (110 kilometers) southeast of Auckland, New Zealand. During 2006, production commenced at the Favona underground deposit. Production at the Martha open pit will cease in 2007. The operation sold 120,300 ounces of gold during 2006. The Martha mine does not currently pay royalties. Under new royalty arrangements, however, Newmont will pay 1% of gross revenues from gold and silver sales, or 5% of accounting profit, whichever is greater, at Favona.

Boddington. Boddington is a development project located 81 miles (130 kilometers) southeast of Perth in Western Australia. As of December 31, 2006 Boddington was owned by Newmont (66.67%) and AngloGold Ashanti Limited (33.33%). In March 2006, Newmont acquired Newcrest Mining Limited’s 22.22% interest in Boddington for $173.

Batu Hijau, Indonesia

Newmont operates the Batu Hijau mine on the island of Sumbawa in the Indonesian province of West Nusa Tenggara through its subsidiary company P.T. Newmont Nusa Tenggara which is a joint venture between Newmont, Sumitomo Corporation and P.T. Pukuafu Indah. In 2008 the Indonesian government threatened to terminate the contract of P.T. Newmont Nusa Tenggara after accusing it of failing to meet its divestment obligations. On April 1, 2009 international arbitrators and its partner sided with Newmont rejecting Jakarta's request to have their contract revoked, which would have forced the company to walk away from the property without any compensation, instead Newmont is forced to sell a 17% stake in an Indonesian subsidiary within 180 days.[2]

Ghana

The Ahafo operation (100% owned) is located in the Brong Ahafo Region of Ghana, approximately 180 miles (290 kilometers) northwest of Accra. Ahafo poured its first gold on July 18, 2006 and commenced commercial production in August 2006. Ahafo sold 202,000 ounces of gold in 2006.

Newmont currently operates two open pits at Ahafo with total reserves contained in 15 pits. The process plant consists of a conventional mill and carbon-in-leach circuit. Ahafo reserves as of December 31, 2006, were 12.6 million equity ounces.

Newmont has one development project in Ghana, currently the subject of further optimization studies. The Akyem project is approximately 80 miles (125 kilometers) northwest of Accra. As of December 31, 2005, Newmont held an 85% interest in the Akyem project. The remaining 15% was held by Kenbert Mines Limited. In January 2006, Newmont acquired the remaining 15% interest, bringing its ownership to 100% of the Akyem project. In the second half of 2006, the Company deferred further development of Akyem, pending completion of permitting, resolution of country-wide power shortages and further engineering and optimization.

Other operations

Canada

During 2006, Newmont’s Canadian operations included two underground mines. Golden Giant (100% owned) is located approximately 25 miles (40 kilometers) east of Marathon, Ontario, Canada, and has been in production since 1985. Mining operations at Golden Giant were completed in December 2005 with remnant mining and milling production continuing throughout most of 2006. In 2006, Golden Giant sold 59,300 ounces of gold. Holloway is located approximately 35 miles (56 kilometers) east of Matheson, Ontario, and about 400 miles (644 kilometers) northeast of Golden Giant, and has been in production since 1996. In 2006, Holloway sold 26,000 ounces of gold. On November 6, 2006, Newmont completed the sale of the Holloway mine to St. Andrews Goldfields Ltd. resulting in a $13 pre-tax gain.

Mexico

Newmont has a 44% interest in La Herradura, which is located in Mexico’s Sonora desert. La Herradura is operated by Industriales Peñoles (which owns the remaining 56% interest) and comprises an open pit operation with run-of-mine heap leach processing. La Herradura sold 79,200 equity ounces of gold in 2006.

Bolivia

The Kori Kollo open pit mine is on a high plain in northwestern Bolivia near Oruro, on government mining concessions issued to a Bolivian corporation, Empresa Minera Inti Raymi S.A. (“Inti Raymi”), in which Newmont has an 88% interest. The remaining 12% is owned by Mrs. Beatriz Rocabado. Inti Raymi owns and operates the mine. The mill was closed in October 2003 and production continued from residual leaching. In 2005, additional material from the stockpiles and Lla Llagua pit were placed on the existing leach pad and ore from the Kori Chaca pit was processed on a new leach pad. In 2006, the mine sold 113,300 equity ounces of gold.

Minahasa, Indonesia

Newmont owns 80% of Minahasa and the remaining 20% interest is a carried interest held by P.T. Tanjung Serapung, an unrelated Indonesian company. Minahasa is located on the island of Sulawesi, approximately 1,500 miles (2,414 kilometers) northeast of Jakarta. Mining was completed in late 2001 and gold production was completed in 2004.

Controversies

Yanacocha mine

The Yanacocha gold mine in northern Peru is considered one of the largest and most profitable in the world, producing over US$7 billion worth of gold to date. Before 1994 the mine was co-owned by Newmont, Buenaventura (a Peruvian mining company), and Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières (BRGM), a French government-owned company. This partnership collapsed in 1994 after BRGM tried to sell part of its shares in the company to an Australian company which was a rival of Newmont. Newmont and Buenaventura would both go to court to challenge the trade.

Larry Kurlander, then a senior executive at Newmont, claimed the French President Jacques Chirac had sent a letter to then Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori asking him to intervene in the court case in favor of the French owned company. Kurlander had been sent by Newmont to Peru in order to try and get a favorable outcome for Newmont in the dispute. The legal battle would eventually make it all the way up to the Peruvian Supreme Court.

During this period Kurlander acknowledges having met with Vladimiro Montesinos, the Peruvian intelligence chief who has since been found guilty of embezzlement, illegally assuming his post as intelligence chief, abuse of power, influence peddling and bribing TV stations. [1] [2] However, Kurlander claims that he did nothing illegal and that the French government were taking similar steps in trying to contact Montesinos. The French ambassador to Peru Antoine Blanca denies this, pointing to the fact that Montesinos was on the CIA payroll and thus would naturally side with the U.S-based company.

After the fall of Fujimori in 2000 a number of videos Montesinos had taped of himself meeting with several domestic and foreign leaders and offering bribes and accepting them had emerged. In October 2005 Frontline in co-production with The New York Times found a February 1998 recording of a telephone conversation between Montesinos and Kurlander. The following is an excerpt from the tape:

Kurlander:...we have a very serious problem in Peru with our company (Newmont) and Minera Buenaventura so I have enlisted the support of some of my friends from a variety of intelligence communities. I need it especially because the other side (the French government) has been acting quite strangely.
Montesinos (to interpreter): Tell him that I am perfectly aware of the problem he has and the people he represents have with the French, as well as the problem he has with the judiciary.
Kurlander: So now you have a friend for life. I want a friend for life.
Montesinos (to interpreter): I thank you very much for what you have just told me and well you already have a friend. Tell him I'm going to help him with the voting. I would like to know the tricky practices of the French. The French Connection!
Kurlander: The French Connection!
(laughter) [3]

Along with this telephone conversation, Frontline and The New York Times also re-broadcast three other videos. One was filmed in April 1998 and shows Montesinos talking to "Don Arabian", the CIA station chief in Peru, in an attempt to get CIA to pressure the U.S. to back Newmont in the case. In the video Montesinos claims to have found e-mails from Paris to Peru of French officials trying to influence the court to get a decision favorable to France.

Another video recorded in May 1998 shows Montesinos meeting with Peruvian Supreme Court Justice, and former classmate, Jaime Beltran Quiroga. In it Montesinos states that state interests are at stake in the case between Newmont and BRGM. He tells Quiroga that if the decision goes to Newmont that the United States will back Peru in its boarder dispute with Ecuador which had a few years ago exploded into the Cenepa War. He also tells Quiroga to deny any connection with him to the press. Quiroga would later play a crucial role in the case, his vote would be the deciding vote in the Newmont victory. After the video was first broadcast in Peru in 2001, on a Peruvian local television station the French Ambassador Antoine Blanca was quoted as saying "Now I know why Newmont won".

In the final July 1999 video, Montesinos is again seen with the now departing CIA station chief "Don Arabian" giving him a gift and thanking him for the help he has given Peru stating "[W]e hope that when you're back their [in Washington] you'll remember your friends".

Buyat Bay, Indonesia

In August 2004, the Indonesian Ministry of Environment filed a US$133.6 million civil lawsuit against Newmont, claiming tailings from the company's Minahasa Raya mine polluted Buyat Bay in the North Sulawesi province, contaminating local fish stocks and causing nearby villagers to become seriously ill. Newmont denied the allegations, arguing that the illnesses had more to do with poor hygiene and poverty. On November 15, 2005, a South Jakarta court dismissed the suit on technical grounds, saying the government had breached the terms of its contract with Newmont when it took legal action before seeking arbitration. Environmentalists urged for the suit to be appealed, but on December 1, 2005, Environment Minister Rachmat Witoelar said the government expected to reach an out-of-court settlement with Newmont's local subsidiary. "By negotiating a settlement, we hope to be able to quickly compensate people living near the mine," he said. The government negotiating team was led by chief Economics Minister Aburizal Bakrie. On February 16, 2006, the Indonesian government announced it would settle the civil suit for US$30 million to be paid over the next 10 years. The agreement also includes increased scientific monitoring and enhanced community development programs for the North Sulawesi province.

With the civil lawsuit settled, attention focused on the criminal charges against President Director Richard Ness. In December 2006, Newmont Mining Corp. objected to a documentary entitled Bye Bye Buyat being nominated for Indonesia's top film award, FFI's Citra Award. The company said that it interfered with Ness' ongoing trial.[3]

After a 21-month trial—one of the longest proceedings in Indonesian history—Ness was found innocent of the pollution charges on April 24, 2007.[4] The court found that the company was in compliance with all regulations and permits during its operations at the site, and failed to find evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that Nemont's subsidiary had polluted Buyat Bay. At the end of May, the prosecution appealed to the Supreme Court to overturn the ruling.[4]

A week after being found not guilty of criminal charges, Richard Ness sued The New York Times in Indonesian court for libel. The lawsuit asks for nearly US$65 million in damages, and that The New York Times print a page-one retraction of previously published articles.[5]

References

  1. ^ Railroad News, [[Trains (magazine)|]], September 1994, pp. 14-16
  2. ^ McDowell, Robin (April 1, 2009). "Newmont Told to Sell Shares in Indonesian Unit". Associated Press Via ABC. http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=7229984. Retrieved 2009-04-02. 
  3. ^ "Mining firm objects to pollution film up for Indonesian award". Agence France-Presse. December 20, 2006. http://sg.news.yahoo.com/061220/1/45khc.html. 
  4. ^ a b "Newmont responds to prosecutor in Indonesia case". Reuters. June 28, 2007. http://in.today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2007-06-28T125847Z_01_NOOTR_RTRMDNC_0_India-282158-1.xml&archived=False. 
  5. ^ Steve Fisor, An exonerated Ness files lawsuit against the New York Times, Engineering and Mining Journal, June 2007, p.2.

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