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Published Jan 19 2005 by The Telegraph, Archived Jan 19 2005

Western Mining Corp: shortage of uranium adds value

by Edward Simpkins

Andrew Michelmore, the chief executive of the Australian mining group WMC Resources, will tell investors in London this week that the world faces a shortage of uranium and that his company has the world's biggest deposit of the metal.

Michelmore will use the looming shortage to reinforce his argument that a hostile A$7.4bn (£3bn) bid for WMC from Xstrata, the London-listed miner, seriously undervalues the company.

"I'll be telling investors we have around a third of the world's uranium resources," he said. He will point out that the price of the metal, which is used as a fuel in nuclear power stations, has already doubled since 2003.

"With independent experts forecasting long-term valuations of between US$20 and US$30 per lb, against our production costs of under US$5 per lb, WMC has a unique opportunity to benefit from this imbalance."

Michelmore also rejected allegations that an independent valuation of the company released as part of its defence document is misleading because it makes the assumption that a takeover has gone through.

He flew into London on Friday to persuade UK-based investors to reject Xstrata's A$6.35-a-share bid. WMC shares are trading at A$7.21.

(January 16, 2005)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Editorial Notes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

WMC is a company notorious with Australian activists for funding advertisments in the 1980s against indigenous land rights claims, and more recently because of their ties to anti-environmentalist 'conservative' think-tanks.

Their claims of a global uranium shortage should be considered in the context of the fact that they are trying to talk up their share price to beat the take over bid from Xstrata, but the claims are supported by other reports.

-AF

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Original article available here
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