Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Deutsche Bank Sticks Out Among Financiers of Peabody’s Coal Loan

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(Bloomberg) — When Peabody Energy Corp. agreed to buy the coal assets of Anglo American Plc, only one European lender joined the US investment bankers and private credit specialists financing the deal: Deutsche Bank AG.

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Peabody obtained a $2.1 billion bridge loan to help it pay for the acquisition, according to a Nov. 25 filing. Behind that loan are divisions of KKR & Co., a unit of Jefferies Financial Group Inc. and Deutsche Bank. Of the firms providing financing, only Deutsche Bank has published an explicit policy on coal.

At issue is the extent to which the financing crosses a line at the German bank, whose exclusion policy singles out the thermal coal used for heating and electricity. The mines Peabody is acquiring produce mostly metallurgical coal, which is used in the manufacture of steel. But the company produces both types of coal across its operations and one of the mines being acquired produces thermal coal.

A spokesperson for Deutsche Bank said any business it does involving coal is closely analyzed and all transactions are in line with its exclusion policy.

But climate activists say the distinction between different grades of coal is arbitrary, and ultimately irrelevant when it comes to measuring environmental damage.

“Coal is coal regardless of its end use,” said Cynthia Rocamora, an industry campaigner at climate nonprofit Reclaim Finance. All types are “extremely polluting and need to be phased out,” she said.

Coal that’s broadly classified as metallurgical — often called met coal — can be sold in thermal-coal markets. In fact, it’s something that happens regularly for lower quality metallurgical products like pulverized coal injection (PCI) and semi-soft coking coal, according to Alexandre Claude, chief executive of DBX Commodities, a dry-bulk tracking firm.

The switch was particularly common in 2022 after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine upended pricing. From Europe to Asia, utilities took delivery of met coal to fire power plants as the cost of thermal coal surged.

Vic Svec, vice president of investor relations at Peabody, said “a small amount of crossover volumes by any metallurgical coal producer is always possible.” He also said there’s a “very high probability” that the coal from the mines Peabody is acquiring from Anglo American will go to steel markets.

In a February filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, Peabody said it “may market some of its metallurgical-coal products as a thermal-coal product from time to time.”

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