Factbox: Excerpts from U.S. SEC fraud filing against Rio Tinto former top executives

Reuters 

(Reuters) - The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has charged mining company and two of its former top executives with inflating the value of coal assets in Mozambique and concealing critical information while tapping the market for billions of dollars.

Thomas Albanese, 60, was chief executive of from May 2007 until January 2013, when he was forced out after the company announced massive impairments.

Guy Robert Elliott, 61, was chief financial officer of from 2002 to April 2013.

"There is no truth in any of these charges," Albanese said in a statement following publication of the case.

Christina Mills, a spokeswoman for Elliott, said Elliott would vigorously contest the charges.

said it would defend itself vigorously against the SEC's allegations. The company said Britain's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) had "made no findings of fraud, or of any systemic or widespread failure by Tinto".

The FCA also said on Tuesday it had reached a settlement with under which the company would pay a fine of 27 million pounds ($35.6 million) to settle claims that it breached accounting rules in connection with the Mozambique assets.

Below are extracts from the U.S. filing against Tinto, Albanese and Elliott.

This case concerns a course of deceptive conduct -- a -- by Tinto, its chief executive officer, Albanese, and its chief financial officer, Elliott (collectively, 'defendants') to conceal the rapid and dramatic decline in value of a coal business in Mozambique, Africa, that acquired for $3.7 billion in April 2011.

This high-profile transaction was Tinto's second large-scale acquisition under Albanese's leadership and had already experienced dramatic setbacks with Albanese's first large-scale acquisition Alcan Inc. (Less than two years after the acquisition of Alcan, in February 2009, had announced a $7.9 billion impairment charge to Alcan's carrying value. Together with three subsequent impairments, this wrote off substantially all of Alcan's acquisition value).

The Mozambique acquisition was expected to restore the market's confidence in Albanese's deal-making acumen, but on-the-ground realities in Mozambique quickly undermined that narrative.

purchased the Mozambican coal business on the central assumption that it could profitably mine, transport and sell more than 40 million tons of coal per year..... by the end of 2011, knew that it could transport and sell only about 5 percent of the amount of coal it had originally assumed.

The defendants concealed the nature and extent of these adverse developments from Tinto's board of directors, audit committee, independent auditors and the market. If disclosed, the developments would have triggered an impairment analysis of RTCM (Coal Mozambique).

RTCM executives advised Albanese and Elliott that RTCM's valuation under the best configuration was negative $680 million in May 2012. Yet continued to carry RTCM on its books at a value of more than $3 billion.

raised a total of $5.5 billion in U.S. debt offerings that incorporated materially misleading statements and omissions concerning RTCM's valuation. Of that amount, raised approximately $3 billion in an offering initiated soon after Albanese and Elliott learned of RTCM's negative $680 million evaluation.

... From in or about November 2011 until on or about January 17, 2013, defendants engaged in a series of misrepresentations, misleading omissions and deceptive acts to conceal from the market RTCM's devastating loss in value and their own terrible decision to acquire RTCM for more than $3 billion. (In 2014, sold RTCM for $50 million, less than 2 percent of the acquisition price.)

(Mozambique was believed to be an emerging coking coal region. Coking coal, used as an ingredient in steel-making, a market dominated by Rio's rival BHP, is rarer than thermal coal, used in power generation.)

In the course of Tinto's pre-acquisition due diligence, Tinto's in-house experts identified a series of significant risks, including risks related to barging, other transport options and coal quantity and quality and they repeatedly described the risks to Albanese and Elliott. However, Albanese and Elliott did not disclose this material information to Tinto's board of directors.

The government of Mozambique formally rejected Tinto's barging proposal in December 2011, citing 36 separate grounds for the decision. In a letter signed by eight government ministries, the government summarised its position, stating:

The Zambezi River is part of a series of environmentally sensitive areas and protected by international conventions and holds the largest biodiversity in the country ... This project will bring significant negative impacts to the [environment] and to the population living along the Zambezi.

(Reporting by Barbara Lewis in London; Editing by Dale Hudson)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, October 18 2017. 15:58 IST