Glencore: Down But Not Out Of The Fight

 | Sep 30, 2015 02:22AM ET

An article in the London Telegraph, reporting on the collapse of Glencore (LONDON:GLEN)’s share price, this week suggests the firm could be in danger of being wiped out by its debt pile. Although the FTSE 100 miner is making efforts to reduce its near £31 billion ($46.98 billion) debt pile by raising fresh equity, closing mines, selling trading inventory and canceling its dividend payment, the newspaper seems to believe it will be too little too late.

Glencore’s shares floated back in 2011 at 530 pence ($8) giving it a market capitalization of £38 billion ($57 billion), at the time. The company used cash raised from investors, in addition to additional debt, to complete the purchase of mining giant Xstrata a year later, but that left it exposed as commodities markets collapsed this year and, in lockstep, so did the company’s share price.

h3 Plenty of Pain to go Around/h3

Not that Glencore is alone. Anglo American PLC (LONDON:AAL), for example, fell in exactly the same manner as investors digested the consequences of a slowing China and overproduction in the industry.