The chief executive-in-waiting of one the world’s biggest lithium players says the valuations awarded to early-stage projects in Western Australia are far too high.
Paul Graves, who will lead the lithium giant set to emerge from the merger of Australia’s Allkem and New York-listed Livent, punctuated the deal frenzy highlighted by the takeover tussle unfolding around WA explorer Azure Minerals.
Livent’s CEO Paul Graves pictured in Toronto earlier this year. Bloomberg
Mr Graves said the merged Allkem-Livent, known as Arcadium Lithium, would get “aggressive” about acquiring assets in WA once it had a better idea of the landscape.
“There’s a massive disconnect today – massive – between the value someone’s ascribing to a very, very, very early stage, or technically challenging, projects in Australia with only a maiden resource (and) without full ownership,” he said.
“There’s a lot of value being assigned to those by various people down there in Australia and so [it’s] a little challenging to me, to be perfectly honest, to know where the Australian M&A market plays out.”
Mr Graves is currently Livent’s chief executive, and was describing his growth strategy for Arcadium once the $US10.6 billion ($17 billion) merger was completed.
Meantime, WA billionaires Gina Rinehart and Mineral Resources managing director Chris Ellison have emerged with big stakes in SQM-takeover target Azure.
MinRes disclosed on Friday that it had built a 12.3 per cent stake after buying shares above the agreed SQM offer price of $3.52 a share, which valued Azure at $1.6 billion.
Mrs Rinehart’s Hancock Prospecting has an 18.9 per cent stake. SQM, with 19.9 per cent, is weighing up its next move.
Azure owns 60 per cent of the Andover lithium project in WA’s
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