Funding Zim diamond miners risky: SA bank

via Funding Zim diamond miners risky: SA bank – DailyNews Live 14 July 2014 by John Kachembere

HARARE – A leading South African bank says it is difficult to fund diamond mining ventures in Zimbabwe because of the high political risk and uncertainty in the country.

Rand Merchant Bank (RMB)’s business development director Henk De Hoop said he believed this view was not exclusive to his institution, but that any credible bank would refrain from lending funds to a firm operating in a country with as much political uncertainty as Zimbabwe.

He said Zimbabwe has of late rescinded the licence of a diamond company and threatened not to renew those of others.

“These policies leave mining firms unable to complete the work they borrowed money to carry out and hence they are unable to pay their financiers back for said funds,” De Hoop noted, adding that, “in such a case, banks have no way of recouping their loans.”

“You as a bank have nothing (you can do) if a company decides to stop paying you back because they have lost a mining licence,” he said. “It needs to have that comfort, it’s one of the base rules and those base rules have been thrown out of the window essentially and the (Zimbabwean) government has not been consistent in that message either,” added De Hoop.

This comes as leading diamond mining firms in the southern African country are struggling against dwindling deposits and liquidity crunch, stoking fears that the mining sector boon that sustained the country’s near double-digit economic growth in the past four years might soon end.

Zimbabwe’s diamond mining concentrates in the eastern region of Marange, near the border with Mozambique. There are seven companies licensed to mine diamonds in Marange fields, accounting for more than 80 percent of the country’s diamond output, which is estimated to have reached 11 million carats in 2013.

Diamond Mining Company (DMC), a joint venture between Pure Diamond of the United Arab Emirates and the State-owned Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation (ZMDC), said alluvial diamond deposits at its claim were diminishing.

“Yes, they are running out. We do not have any conglomerate or kimberlitic deposits.

“We are mostly doing alluvial and the grade is going down. The resources are greatly depleted and we are facing a challenge in production,” DMC general manager Ramzi Malik agencies early in the year.

He said the available reserves could only last them two to three years, adding that the company had since asked government for a new concession.

The government says Zimbabwe holds estimated diamond reserves of 16,5 million tonnes.

But mining officials have hinted that they will not consider giving mining firms new concessions until the existing ones are exhausted. Anjin Investment, a 50/50 joint venture between China’s Anhui Foreign Economic Construction Company and the ZMDC, also complained that it was facing serious financial problems as a result of depleting diamond reserves at its claim.

Anjin board member responsible for corporate affairs Munyaradzi Machacha told a parliamentary committee that the company, which employs about 850 people, was struggling.

“The company is in survival mode. Our resources have dwindled and we are receiving low grade diamonds. Our prices are the lowest in the Marange diamond area,” Machacha said.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 7
  • comment-avatar
    zanupf fear me 10 years ago

    The great diamond robbery masterminded by probably the most corrupt kleptomanic cabal in politics history. We will hunt you down to the holes like where gadaffi Hussein tried to hide. Flush out

    • comment-avatar
      zim reeper 10 years ago

      Zuma ANC are doing the same in sa .What is it with these africans that just want to destroy and steal without reserve.WHAT ARE YOUR CHILDREN GOING TO INHERIT YOU STUPID PEOPLE IF YOU DESTROY EVERTHING NOW.

  • comment-avatar
    Mscynic 10 years ago

    Invest and get your assets hijacked by indigenous partners

  • comment-avatar
    Chaka 10 years ago

    Sure, if it has to do with the zanupf gvt, it is risky

  • comment-avatar
    Mukanya 10 years ago

    How can you fund thieves from the onset,diamonds in Marange/Chiadzwa belong to a cabal of looters masquerading as state authorities.

  • comment-avatar
    JRR56 10 years ago

    Perhaps all those clever people now understand why De Beers did not exploit this mine.

  • comment-avatar
    reason 10 years ago

    That is utter rubbish, you do not fund Zimbabwe diamonds, but the company that will be mining diamonds, and if theses companies hide the royalties and steal, then to hell with them, there are other genuine partners who can mine the diamonds on a win win scenario as opposed to exploitation. Its not the business of bank director to trade in diamonds but its the business of a mining investor to do that and pay his loan to the relevant bank. That is cheap talk from a die hard white Boer whose mind is in the apartheid era.