BHP hopes to sell Rio shareholders its idea of assembling a super miner, supplying the lion's share of the world's industries with millions of tonnes of minerals, but runs the risk of igniting a bidding war with Rio's largest shareholder, state-run aluminum group Aluminum Corp of China (Chinalco).
BHP (BLT.L: Quote, Profile, Research) sweetened its initial approach by 13 percent, offering 3.4 of its shares for every Rio (RIO.L: Quote, Profile, Research) share after a November proposal of three shares for one failed to persuade the Rio board to bless a friendly tie up.
"Rio Tinto shareholders will now decide," BHP Chief Executive Marius Kloppers told reporters. He added: "This is our first and only offer," though he later would not say if that meant it was the final one.
Some analysts doubted the sweetened bid would be enough to win Rio and create the world's third-richest company, ranked behind only Exxon Mobil (XOM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and General Electric (GE.N: Quote, Profile, Research).
"It's a lot fairer than the offer we've had before, (but) it's by no means a knock-out offer," said Bertie Thomson, a fund manager at Aberdeen Asset Management (ADN.L: Quote, Profile, Research), who holds both Rio and BHP shares.
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