UPDATE: BHP's Bid For Potash Corp Pulls Focus To Fertilizer, Food, Farms
18 August 2010 - 5:44PM
Dow Jones News
BHP Billiton Ltd.'s (BHP) US$38.6 billion bid for Canada's
Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc. (POT) underscores increasing
corporate interest in farming, food and fertilizer, the executive
manager of the Fertilizer Industry Federation of Australia, Nick
Drew, said Wednesday.
There is a global trend of increasing population and increasing
wealth in heavily populated countries like India and China and that
means demand for farm products is going to rise, at the same time
as the availability of arable land is being squeezed from
urbanization and environmental degradation, he said.
"There's going to be quite a crunch coming and agriculture is
probably going to become a much more interesting space in the next
few years," Drew told Dow Jones Newswires.
Meanwhile, Colonial First State is fielding more interest in
agricultural and soft commodities investment driven initially by
commodity price spikes, such as recent months for wheat, but also
by recent corporate activity, said portfolio manager Skye
Macpherson.
"BHP Billiton's bid demonstrates there are a lot opportunities
in the global agricultural space," she said.
The board of Potash isn't opposed to a sale but has rejected
BHP's bid as "grossly inadequate," which suggests the sector will
remain in focus until the issue is resolved.
News of the takeover comes after Canada's second-largest
fertilizer producer Agrium Inc. (AGU) Monday announced a
conditional A$1.24 billion cash takeover offer for Australian
agribusiness AWB Ltd. (AWB.AU). AWB was already considering a
share-based nil-premium merger proposal by Australia's GrainCorp
Ltd. (GNC.AU), which if it proceeds would create Australia's
biggest grain company and its biggest agribusiness with a market
capitalization of almost A$2 billion and annual sales in excess of
A$7 billion.
Last month, Singapore-based Wilmar International Ltd. (WLMIY)
offered A$1.75 billion for Sucrogen, the sugar and renewables
energy unit of CSR Ltd. (CSR.AU). The takeover is being considered
by the government's Foreign Investment Review Board, with CSR
having already agreed to the sale.
Drew said BHP may well be just seeing potash as just another
mined commodity and would be deciding on the value of any takeover
on that basis.
"But I suspect the fact that they're interested gives you a clue
as to which way they think the market is going for fertilizers,
which is just a reflection of the market for food," he said.
Signs of a sharp increase in food demand from rising population
was seen in the 2008 spike for fertilizer prices and in the spike
in wheat prices since early June due to the Russian drought, he
said.
Both these spikes are symptoms that suggest the future of
agriculture is both more volatile and brighter, he said.
"We're starting to see productivity bump against demand," Drew
said.
The U.N. Food & Agriculture Organization said last year it
expects the world's human population to rise to 9.1 billion in 2050
from 6.7 billion now, which - given increasing income growth and
urbanization - would require a 70% increase in global farm
production.
Australia is a major global supplier of traded grains, meats,
dairy products, and fibers, such as wool and cotton.
Potash, along with nitrogen and phosphate, are key crop
nutrients that replenish soil and increase the amount of crops
produced on farmland. Potash Corp., based in the prairies of
central Canada, controls 20% of the globe's potash supply.
A senior portfolio manager at Colonial First State, Renzo
Casaroto, said security of food supply is taken for granted in
Australia, but not so elsewhere in places like China and other
Asian nations, which have to work pretty hard to secure food supply
and materials.
As a result, companies domiciled in these nations want to buy
into agriculture, whether its farmland or other assets, he
said.
BHP has been looking at developing a potash business for at
least two years, particularly given its highly favorable industry
structure, which is similar to iron ore in terms of a limited
number of suppliers and a limited number of areas that have high
grade potash deposits, which will lead to some pricing power over
time, Casaroto said.
Macpherson said the barriers to entry for potash are the high
capital costs and the long lead time to bring a mine into
production, given the underground development needed.
-By Ray Brindal, Dow Jones Newswires; 612 62080902;
ray.brindal@dowjones.com
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