Liontown chief executive Tony Ottaviano at the part-built Kathleen Valley mine in August.Credit:Evan Collis
Albemarle’s exit left Liontown looking for funds to complete its flagship Kathleen Valley mine. The US giant was expected to fund the project if it was successful in its bid.
Rinehart has amassed a 20 per cent stake in Liontown,with the Albermarle takeover talk and the interest of the iron ore heiress,sending the miner’s shares on a tear.
When Liontown’s board rejected Albemarles’ third bid of $2.50 a share in March,its shares jumped 68 per cent in a day to $2.57 each. The board’s rebuff looked justified when a fourth bid of $2.92 share arrived in July,which was subsequently raised to $3.00 in September.
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Liontown then opened its books to Albemarle for four weeks of due diligence to seal the deal. However,the impending takeover was interrupted when Rinehart,through Hancock Prospecting,revealed she had amassed a stake of almost eight per cent.
Hancock Prospecting subsequently kept increasing its stake – before and after Liontown announced another cost increase for Kathleen Valley,courtesy of WA’s overstretched supply chains and construction workforce – to $951 million.
Albemarle withdrew its offer,noting “growing complexities associated with the proposed transaction”,but did not go as far as to name Rinehart.