Freeport-McMoRan bets on new output in Indonesia
Freeport-McMoRan bets on new output in Indonesia
Bloomberg, Noordwijk/New York
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc., owner of the world's largest
gold mine, is concentrating on new gold and copper discoveries in
Indonesia to help boost the company's stock price, Chief
Executive Richard Adkerson said.
New Orleans-based Freeport will concentrate on exploring for
gold and copper in the remote highlands of Indonesia's Papua
after favorable initial prospecting in the region, Adkerson said
in an interview in Noordwijk, Netherlands.
"There's copper and gold in the minerals and certain prospects
are purely gold. It's something the management team is very
excited about," he said.
"We've done some field work and identified some interesting
prospects."
Further analysis will be needed to determine specific amounts,
Adkerson said.
The company is betting on further mineral discoveries, as well
as share buybacks and special-dividend payouts, to boost its
share price, he said. Freeport's stock has fallen about 15
percent in the last two months.
"The shares are trading at a very attractive multiple in
relation to other companies because we are located in Indonesia
and because it's a single asset," he said, referring to the
company's Grasberg mine, the world's second-largest copper mine,
located in Papua.
High commodity prices and an improvement in political risk in
Indonesia have prompted the company to start exploration in the
highland areas near the mine, he said.
"Indonesia as a country is undergoing significant improvements
and that should help investor perceptions of our company,"
Adkerson said.
The company has about 40 billion pounds of probable and proved
copper reserves and 46 million ounces of gold. Production in a
normal year is about 1.3 billion pounds of copper and 2.2 million
ounces of gold, he said.