Legal Business

Magic Circle take the lead as Glencore sells $2.5bn stake in agricultural arm

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Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and Linklaters advised on Glencore’s $2.5bn sale last month of a 40% stake in Glencore Agricultural Products to Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB).

Glencore instructed a Linklaters team led by corporate heavyweights David Avery-Gee and Charlie Jacobs, while Freshfields corporate partners David Higgins and Richard Thexton advised CPPIB. Freshfields’ Amsterdam managing partner Winfred Knibbeler also advised on the antitrust aspects of the deal.

Legal Business

Dealwatch: Glencore returns to Linklaters and Clifford Chance for $10bn debt deal

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Commodities giant Glencore has turned to Magic Circle firms Linklaters and Clifford Chance to implement a raft of plans in order to cut $10.2bn from the business’ $30bn debt pile.

In the mining and metals giant’s biggest mandate since its $66bn acquisition of Xstrata in 2013, the company shelved its dividends and announced a $2.5bn equity-raise in a bid to slash up to $10bn worth of debt by the end of 2016.

The legal team chosen by Glencore was the same team from Linklaters and Clifford Chance that executed the drawn-out Xstrata deal.

Linklaters’ corporate heavyweight Charlie Jacobs, who handles the firm’s relationship with Glencore, and City corporate partner David Avery-Gee were selected to handle the corporate end of the mandate.

Citi and Morgan Stanley also returned to run the $2.5bn share placement, four years after acting as Glencore’s joint global coordinators on the company’s floatation in 2011. Morgan Stanley and Citi will underwrite 78% of the proposed equity issuance, with Glencore senior management, including chief executive Ivan Glasenberg, agreeing to inject the remaining 22%.

Clifford Chance, which advised those investment banks on the initial public offering, fielded the same team of Iain Hunter and Adrian Cartwright to handle the finance element of Glencore’s debt plan. Hunter, a capital markets partner, and Cartwright, Clifford Chance’s global head of capital markets, were also involved in Glencore’s merger with Xstrata.

Nearly $1.6bn worth of dividends expected to be paid out at the end this year have also been scrapped, with plans in place to suspend the $800m interim dividend in 2016.

Glasenberg said: ‘Notwithstanding our strong liquidity, positive operational free cashflow generation, lack of debt covenants, modest near-term maturities and the recent affirmation of our credit ratings, recent stakeholder engagement in response to market speculation around the sustainability of our leverage, highlights the desire to strengthen and protect our balance sheet amid the current market uncertainty.’

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

In-house moves: Glencore and RSA announce senior appointments

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Glencore Xstrata has promoted former Glencore general counsel (GC) Richard Marshall as its overall head of legal in the wake of its $66bn merger.

Marshall joined Glencore in 2005, having worked at Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft. He moved to the firm’s London office from the Sydney office of Mallesons Stephen Jacques where he had been a partner since 1984.

Marshall will now head the legal and compliance team according to a Glencore Xstrata presentation document published on 3 May, which also promised a ‘capital-efficient business model’ following the merger.

Negotiations over the deal, which have taken 15 months, have seen Glencore secure the vast majority of senior appointments in the newly merged mining giant. Former Xstrata chief legal counsel Benny Levene has left the company after a period as a consultant.

In other client-side appointments, global insurer RSA has announced the promotion of Carl Blake to general counsel for Central and Eastern Europe and the Middle East.

Blake joined the London-headquartered RSA in February 2012 as part of the group legal counsel team, having previously worked as a senior associate in the corporate and M&A team of Clifford Chance.

He will now lead the RSA legal team within the CEEME region on a range of legal, risk and compliance matters.

Elsewhere, Iglo Group GC Anthony Barratt will leave this year, having joined from Telefónica’s O2 Airwave in 2006.

Private equity giants Blackstone and BC Partners made a joint €2.5bn bid for Birds Eye Iglo in June 2012, an offer rejected by Iglo’s owner, Permira.

A spokesman for Iglo Group said: ‘We would like to thank Anthony for the huge contribution he has made to Iglo Group over the past six years and we wish him well for the future when he leaves later in the year. We have begun a search for Anthony’s replacement.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk