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Australian Stock Exchange (ASX)

01 / 10 / 2021 Assignment

This paper circulates around the core theme of Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) together with its essential aspects. It has been reviewed and purchased by the majority of students thus, this paper is rated 4.8 out of 5 points by the students. In addition to this, the price of this paper commences from £ 99. To get this paper written from the scratch, order this assignment now. 100% confidential, 100% plagiarism-free.

1. This assignment is to be submitted in accordance with assessment policy stated in the Subject Outline and Student Handbook. 2. It is the responsibility of all students who have their name on the submitted work, to ensure that the work is in fact done by the group. NB: Incorporating another’s work or ideas into one’s own work without giving appropriate acknowledgement is academic malfeasance. Students should review all assignments for plagiarism checking (self-check) on Blackboard before final submission of hardcopy in the subject. For further details, please refer to the Subject Outline and Student Handbook. 3. Maximum marks available: 20 marks (e.g. 200/10 = 20). 4. Due date of submission: Friday Week 10, T1 2016 5. Assignment should be of an appropriate length (2,000-4,000 words). Use “word-count” and include in report. T1, 2016 ASSIGNMENT QUESTION KARRICK Gold & Copper Ltd. (KGC Ltd), an Australian mining firm listed on the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX), has been operating a large Open Cast (Pit) gold and copper mine in the Star Mountain Range in Papua New Guinea (PNG) for 30 years. The Star Mountain Range in PNG is very isolated (no roads) and has a wide range of exotic plants and animals found nowhere else in the world. Other Information—KGC Ltd. has: 1) Revenues of $30 billion Australian dollars (AUD) a year and, in the absence of new ore finds, has only seven years of ore reserves. 2) The Net Book Value (NBV) of the PP&E is $16.5 billion AUD and another $5.0 billion AUD is needed over the next seven years. 3) There is no active prospecting for additional reserves of ore—because the firm’s current license from the PNG government to mine in that region will expire in eight years. 4) While there have been several rich “shows” of silver and lead ore, 1nothing so far is of commercial quantity and quality. However, the mine manager expects that over the next eight years large deposits of commercially-viable silver-and-lead ore will be found within the mine property or adjacent. 5) The KGC Ltd. employs 3,400 full-time employees in its PNG mine, offices, and processing plant—3,000 are PNG citizens and reside in the Star Mountain Range. The labourparticipation rate in that region of PNG is 32 percent and the unemployment rate (among those 32 percent) is 45 percent. NB: If KGC Ltd. shuts down its mining operations in the Star Mountain Range in PNG, the unemployment rate among the 32 percent participating in the labour market will rise to 95 percent and there are few if any alternative sources of employment. 6) The KGC Ltd. PNG operations pay $4 billion in royalties to the traditional owners of the land where they mine and process ore and $6 billion in taxes to the PNG government. Also, they built and operate the only water-processing plants, grade schools, hospitals, and health centres in the Star Mountain Range in PNG. 1A “show” of a mineral is a small finding of noncommercial amounts. A show of a mineral is a strong indicator that there may be commercial amounts of the ore but is not definitive. 7) In the last few decades, the Christian-animist residents of the Indonesian half of the Island of New Guinea (the Indonesians call their half of the island “Irian Jaya” or “Papua”) have been agitating for independence from Indonesia (it is estimated that 100,000 of them have died in the conflict and some of the tribes have resumed headhunting with the Indonesian soldiers and settlers being targeted. The PNG tribes near the border with Papua are closely related to the tribes across the border and there is fear the conflict and the police actions by the Indonesian army will spill into the PNG portion of the Star Mountain Range. 8) A recent collapse of a “tailings” pond dumped 5 million litres of ore-waste sludge into a river from which two local villages draw their drinking water, fish, hunt, harvest lotus root and water their taro root, yam and cassava crops.2 While most of the sludge flushed through to the ocean in a few days, many environmental groups in Australia are screaming that KGC Ltd. is environmentally irresponsible. The complaints got especially loud and strident after the General Manager of the PNG mine stated at a public meeting: “First) The sludge will quickly flush out to sea; Second) “At sea the sludge will be vastly diluted; Third) The solution to pollution is dilution; Fourth) The peoples of the Star Mountain Range in PNG depend on the KGC Ltd. operations for most of their jobs, clean potable water, health care, and education” 9) The cost of remediating the sludge spill (i.e. clean-up costs, fines, offsetting work elsewhere, and compensating cash payments) is expected to range from $6 billion to $60 billion, depending on the outcome of a court case in PNG that has been initiated by an ecological group from Australia. Please note: KGC Ltd. is claiming that the annual benefits of the KGC Ltd. operations in the Star Mountain Range in PNG offset the harm of the mining and processing (including the rare sludge spill) by manyfold and that should the mine be shutdown, the loss to that region and PNG in general would be devastating. While this case study is adapted from real events and circumstances, names have been changed to protect the innocent and to avoid lawsuits. Please answer the following questions using the above information and supplementing it (as needed) with information from the course, the internet, and other literature. Marks will be awarded for clarity of thought and succinctness of presentation. Required (HI6025 ) Marks a) Should KGC Ltd. revalue its major PPE assets from historic cost to fair-market value? (Discuss the principles, potential issues, and risks). 30 b) The PP&E is estimated to have a replacement value of $20.5 billion AUD and a value in use of $12.0 billion AUD under current expected operations (i.e. seven years) but rises to $30 billion AUD if the contract is renewed for 10 years in addition to the current seven years and new viable ore bodies are found. What is the “True and Fair” value of the PP&E? (Explain). 40 c) Discuss the merits and risks of KGC Ltd. including a “Triple Bottom Line” aspect to its reporting approach 30 d) Discuss the nature of “Legitimacy” and the importance of KGC Ltd. maintaining legitimacy in the eyes of the traditional land-owners, the government of PNG, and the people of Australia. 20 e) Is the “Legitimacy” of KGC Ltd. at risk and what consequences may KGC Ltd. suffer if it loses “Legitimacy”. 30 f) Discuss how KGC Ltd. can restore its legitimacy (include a section on the two types of stakeholder theory in this discussion). 20 g) List the various ways that KGC Ltd. could record the cost of the harm associated with the sludge spill in its GPFS, discuss the pros-and-cons of each method, choose a method and defend your choice.3 30 200




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