South African Mining Dealmaker Plots M&A Push Before Retirement

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The Sibanye-Stillwater Khuseleka platinum mine, operated by Sibanye Gold Ltd., stands in Rustenburg, South Africa, on Wednesday, April 22, 2020. South Africa allowed mining companies to resume operations at half their normal capacity as the government takes its first steps to ease a nationwide coronavirus lockdown.
The Sibanye-Stillwater Khuseleka platinum mine, operated by Sibanye Gold Ltd., stands in Rustenburg, South Africa, on Wednesday, April 22, 2020. South Africa allowed mining companies to resume operations at half their normal capacity as the government takes its first steps to ease a nationwide coronavirus lockdown.

(Bloomberg) -- South African mining dealmaker Neal Froneman is considering retiring in two to three years time, but would first like to double the size of Sibanye Stillwater Ltd.

Froneman built Johannesburg-based Sibanye into a company with a market value of more than 182 billion rand ($11.9 billion) by purchasing gold, platinum and palladium mines in southern Africa and the U.S. Now the 61-year-old is looking for acquisitions in battery metals, before handing over to a successor.

“I would like to see the company’s size double to a $20 billion market capitalization plus before I move on,” Froneman said in an interview from his farm in South Africa’s Limpopo province. “Two to three years sounds like a good innings and I think we can deliver quite a lot in terms of our strategy.”

Nicknamed Mr. Fix-It for turning around some of South Africa’ aging gold mines, Froneman has identified opportunities in nickel, copper and lithium and may announce a deal this year. The company is also looking to acquire more gold assets, though high valuations are currently a deterrent, the CEO said.

“M&A is what we are good at,” Froneman said. “We have created value and we are going to continue to create value in the right way at the right time.”

Froneman re-jigged Sibanye’s management structure last year, appointing long-time ally Richard Stewart to a new position as chief operations officer. At 45, Stewart is the youngest member of Sibanye’s executive team, and the geologist helped forge the company’s platinum-group metals businesses.

“Richard and I work well, he is entrepreneurial, he has got a solid technical background but it’s a broader team that impacts our business,” Froneman said. “Richard is certainly one of the potential successors but there are others.”

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