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Barrick Gold Corp chairman John Thornton looks to future acquisitions as company comes out of ‘intensive care’

Barrick Gold chairman John Thornton's stated goal is to make Barrick one of the best companies in the world this century, in any industry, which means starting to think about acquisitions.

John Thornton looks on Barrick Gold Corp. like a patient finally ready for discharge from hospital and going to abandon the fast living that landed it there.

Barrick Gold Corp has returned on top as Canada’s best-performing stock and also the world’s most valuable gold company

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Barrick Gold Corp. has surged to become Canada’s best-performing stock like a two-month rally in the precious metal gives added lift towards the company’s turnaround efforts.

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In his first on-the-record interview in several months, the executive chairman of the world’s largest gold producer discussed all of the hot-button issues – from his perspectives on acquisitions and disposals towards the sprawl of his board to his own controversial pay packet.

Criticized for lacking industry experience, the 62-year-old banker-turned-miner could be forgiven if he made a decision to gloat: on his watch Barrick has transformed from market casualty to darling, culminating with a peer-beating 82 percent stock surge this season. A big-picture guy, he speaks in entire paragraphs from the mile above ground where the way forward is clear: it’s time for Barrick to get off the defensive, albeit cautiously.

“When you’re coming out of intensive care, both for the great of your health and for purpose of reputation, it’s extremely important to be clear and transparent about what you’re doing,” he explained in Ny on Wednesday. “All of those things argue for going slowly.”

Deal Discipline

Thornton’s stated goal would be to make Barrick one of the best companies on the planet this century, in any industry, which means beginning to consider acquisitions. Senior executives have been running through deal scenarios to “exercise the muscles.”

To be sure, the organization is “nowhere close” to an acquisition despite the fact there aren’t any shortage of opportunities amid what had, up to now, been a four-year downturn for gold. “The very first thing we do absolutely should be successful,” Thornton said.

What the company can’t afford is yet another fiasco. In 2011, Barrick expanded its copper footprint with the $7.3-billion acquisition of Equinox Minerals Ltd., swelling its debt as high as US$15.8 billion in 2013. The deal was the single biggest factor that led to a long and painful restructuring. In September, Barrick said hello would close the unit.

Since 2013, Barrick has cut assets, jobs and costs and adopted a decentralized model more similar to a tech firm than a miner. Debts are right down to US$10 billion and also the clients are looking to halve that within the medium term. Asked if he’d consider expanding beyond gold when the company opens its wallet, Thornton said now you ask , “in almost any meaningful time period academic: the answer is no.”

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