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RIO TINTO - 2006 (RIO)     

dai oldenrich - 20 Apr 2006 09:18

Rio Tinto is a world leader in finding, mining and processing the earths mineral resources. The Groups worldwide operations supply essential minerals and metals that help to meet global needs and contribute to improvements in living standards. Rio Tinto encourages strong local identities and has a devolved management philosophy, entrusting responsibility with accountability to the workplace. Major products include aluminium, copper, diamonds, energy products (coal and uranium), gold, industrial minerals (borax, titanium dioxide, salt, talc and zircon), and iron ore. The Groups activities span the world but are strongly represented in Australia and North America with significant businesses in South America, Asia, Europe and southern Africa. Rio Tinto comprises wholly owned subsidiaries (such as Borax, Comalco, Hamersley, Rio Tinto Coal Australia, Kennecott and Rio Tinto Iron & Titanium), partly owned subsidiaries (Coal & Allied and Palabora) and non-managed, (Escondida) and joint ventures (Grasberg) in which public shareholders, other companies or governments are partners.

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=rio&Si
            Red = 25 day moving average.           Green = 200 day moving average.




SALES PER ACTIVITY (Data as of 31/12/2005)

Iron:        29%
Coal:       19%
Copper     18%
Aluminum: 14.5%
Minerals:  12.5%
:              6%
Misc:        1%



cynic - 17 Jan 2008 07:41 - 35 of 325

apparently following in FT .... Rio Tinto (rumours of an increased offer from BHP Billiton)

anyone got the full comment to post?

cynic - 21 Jan 2008 09:35 - 36 of 325

bought into XTA at a good price this morning (phew!) and am now undedcided whether or not RIO is worth a flutter at current level (4490), even if still perhaps 3.00 or even 4.00 above BHT's opening offer

HARRYCAT - 21 Jan 2008 10:08 - 37 of 325

RIO should drop to the 200 DMA, imo, which would be about 4200.
XTA certainly seems a better bet at the moment. But both of these are M&A driven at present, so DMAs may not be the best guide.

cynic - 21 Jan 2008 14:22 - 38 of 325

you are right that they are not, but at least they give some sort of support logic

Toya - 22 Jan 2008 07:06 - 39 of 325

Beware of what might happen today; this is the news from Australia, via AFX:

"Index leader BHP Billiton shed 2.29 dollars or 6.7 percent to 31.00 dollars and takeover target Rio Tinto dropped 13.25 dollars or 11.6 percent to 101.00 dollars."

An 11% drop here would certainly take it well below the 4200 level.

robertalexander - 23 Jan 2008 13:19 - 40 of 325

does anyone know what 3.58 BLT shares and $16.50 would mean as a RIO price.[from BLT RNS as poss price for t/o]?

3.58 x ~12.50=~44.50 + $16.50 does that make RIO's price about 50.00 a share

Is the 3.58 factor for a closing price published earlier and not a price from today(which i used)

Anyone shed some light please?

Alex

cynic - 31 Jan 2008 08:24 - 41 of 325

i have just banked my profit (again!) in RIO because there still seems to be considerable doubt as to whether or not a revised bid from BLT or the Chinese will even materialise, and if it does, whether that will justify the current market price of 4850/4900 ...... personally, I have my doubts, and that will lead to a major fallout, albeit that that may drag others into the ring.

unluckyboy - 31 Jan 2008 10:59 - 42 of 325

Sorry cynic but didn't you buy rio @ 52.

cynic - 31 Jan 2008 11:11 - 43 of 325

yes, and took an absolute hammering for my pains and allowing pure greed to rule ..... bit several bullets and dumped them about 10 days ago, since which time i have acted far more prudently and profitably by trading in and out ... ditto with XTA

HARRYCAT - 01 Feb 2008 09:45 - 44 of 325

This looks like the BHP prospect of an offer is now over:
"Earlier today, Shining Prospect, a Singapore-based entity owned by China's Chinalco and US firm Alcoa, which has committed $1.2bn into the company by way of a convertible instrument, announced it has acquired about 12% of Rio Tinto's shares.

Chinalco and Alcoa confirmed that they do not currently intend to make an offer for Rio Tinto but said they reserve the right to do so.

No official figure was mentioned for the purchase price of the Rio Tinto stake but traders noted talk that the two companies paid 6,000p a share, well above last night's closing price."

Falcothou - 01 Feb 2008 10:08 - 45 of 325

Staggering jump today, glad I wasn't short!

cynic - 01 Feb 2008 10:13 - 46 of 325

Earlier today, Shining Prospect, a Singapore-based entity owned by China's Chinalco and US firm Alcoa, which has committed $1.2bn into the company by way of a convertible instrument, announced it has acquired about 12% of Rio Tinto's shares.

Chinalco and Alcoa confirmed that they do not currently intend to make an offer for Rio Tinto but said they reserve the right to do so.

No official figure was mentioned for the purchase price of the Rio Tinto stake but traders noted talk that the two companies paid 6,000p a share, well above last night's closing price.

BHP Billiton has until February 6th to formalise an offer for Rio Tinto, a deadline imposed by the UK Takeover Panel under the regulator's 'put up or shut-up' rule.

Analysts had believed that BHP Billiton would at least formalise its indicative 3-for-1 paper offer for Rio Tinto, which would have valued the world's third-largest miner at about $130bn.

The Australian newspaper had reported on Wednesday that BHP Billiton could afford to hike its share offer for Rio Tinto to 4.25-for-one, according to Rio Tinto advisor Macquarie Bank.


it would therefore make sense for anyone buying into RIO at this juncture to keep an eye on BLT price and multiply it by anything between 3 and 4.25 if only as an estimate of where a bid may be pitched

HARRYCAT - 01 Feb 2008 12:43 - 47 of 325

Jonathan Compton from BBC2 Working Lunch says that this investment by Shining Prospect is a blocking tactic to prevent BHP from taking control of RIO, with no intention at all of a counter bid for RIO. He says watch out; Big bounce, followed by a big fall.

cynic - 01 Feb 2008 13:08 - 48 of 325

he may be right or he may be wrong ...... if BLT come in with an eventual thumping bid (not necessarily the initial sighting one) of say 65, then SP will be hard pressed to block and/or RIO board will be hard pressed to counter

cynic - 02 Feb 2008 09:39 - 49 of 325

looks like lots of interesting reading about this over the w/e

required field - 02 Feb 2008 09:57 - 50 of 325

Blimey,..... 50 stocks......hefty..!

cynic - 02 Feb 2008 10:01 - 51 of 325

i do it on CFD, but T10/20 would work just as well i guess ...... whichever one does, a guaranteed stop must surely be mandatory unless one is in need of a cure for severe constipation!

Toya - 02 Feb 2008 19:37 - 52 of 325

Cynic, and others if interested: here's some weekend reading for you from today's Times:

Move on Rio signals China's determination to secure supply

Aluminium group comes out of the shadows

Dealmaker role for Beijing as battle shifts to new metal

Toya - 02 Feb 2008 19:40 - 53 of 325

There's also this:

Link to Times website for earlier articles

Dinner is about to be served (aren't I lucky!) so may I wish happy studying!

Falcothou - 02 Feb 2008 21:16 - 54 of 325

If it's a spoiling move, I wonder if sp will head the same way as ITV after Sky's 135p grand purchase. Strange to think that you could have picked them up for 38 a fortnight ago when the world appeared to be caving in!
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