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BHP Billiton to sell US shale business

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Isaac Kaledzi is an experienced and award winning journalist from Ghana. He has worked for several media brands both in Ghana and on the International scene. Isaac Kaledzi is currently serving as an African Correspondent for DW.

Mining giant BHP Billiton will sell its US shale assets after pressure from shareholders to offload the underperforming business.

The miner said a number of parties are interested in the assets and it is “actively pursuing options to exit”.

Shareholder Elliott Management has campaigned for strategic changes at BHP including the sale of its shale operations.

It comes as the company reported $5.89bn (£4.56bn) annual net profit.

Shale assets

BHP said on Tuesday that it deemed the shale business “non-core” and was exploring options to offload the assets.

Chief executive Andrew Mackenzie said a number of parties are interested in acquiring its onshore US oil and gas operations, but would not name the price the company is seeking for the assets.

BHP’s entry into US shale came at the peak of the fracking boom in 2011. A slump in oil prices slugged the business and forced a $7.2bn writedown last year.

BHP chairman Jac Nasser, who retires this year, recently conceded a $20bn investment in shale six years ago was a mistake in hindsight.

Analysts have suggested the business could sell for about half that in today’s market.

New-York based fund manager Elliott Management had been agitating for a sale or other form of divestment of the US shale business.

The activist shareholder has publicly campaigned for a series of other changes at BHP, including the elimination of dual-structured Australia and London stock listings, and higher shareholder returns.

Commodity rebound

Plans to sell its US shale operations came as the global miner posted an annual net profit of $5.89bn, following a record $6.39bn loss a year earlier.

The result was slightly below analysts’ expectations.

The miner tripled its final dividend to $0.43 a share, which was also shy of expectations.

The Anglo-Australian firm, like other miners, has benefited from a rebound in industrial metals prices after a slump caused by supply gluts and economic slowdown in China.

China is the world’s biggest buyer of commodities.

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