Posted on 30 Apr 2008
Midwest's board backed the offer of 6.38 dollars per share,
which values the firm at 1.36 billion dollars (1.27 billion
Sinosteel's revised bid was "an attractive offer for
The bid needs 50.1 percent approval from shareholders to
proceed. Sinosteel previously announced that Australian regulators had cleared
the bid.
Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan said he was not concerned at
moves by Beijing-owned firms to buy up Australian resource companies, although
he said they could expect the same scrutiny as for any other foreign investment
deal.
"Chinese investment has got a role to play in this
country but we've made it very clear when it comes to foreign investment from
Chinese government entities that we will apply our national interest criteria
as we do in all other cases," Swan told Sky News.
"We think it's important that investment is competitive,
that investment is non-strategic, and that investment is in our national
interest."
UBS said that the Sinosteel bid represented fair market
value.
"Given that it now provides full value to shareholders
immediately and effectively eliminates all the risks associated with
exploration and development, we believe the offer is fair," it said in a
client note.
The Australian Financial Review welcomed Sinosteel's
investment, describing it as
China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) is
The Review said in an editorial that the bid was prompted by
It said the level of
"The stand-off over prices and the willingness of the
government-backed Sinosteel to rapidly enter the Australian minerals market
indicate the level of determination of
Another Australian iron ore miner, Murchison Metals,
revealed on Tuesday that Sinosteel had acquired 2.4 percent of its shares.
Junior miner Apollo Minerals also revealed Tuesday that an
unnamed Chinese iron and steel group had declared its intention to lift its
stake in the company from 12 percent to 19.9 percent.
China's state-owned aluminium giant Chinalco and US-based
Alcoa in February purchased a nine percent stake in Rio, a move widely seen as
an attempt to block any merger with BHP.