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A Legacy of Innovation - Newmont Mining Corporation

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Attempted Takeovers Focus on Gold<br />

By the mid-1980s, the company is flush with<br />

cash, has little debt and is developing a growing<br />

gold district in Nevada. Many on Wall Street<br />

discover that <strong>Newmont</strong>’s parts are worth more than<br />

the whole, believing the company’s non-gold assets<br />

<strong>of</strong> $2.2 billion are undervalued by $1.5 billion.<br />

This attracts corporate raiders – Consolidated<br />

Gold Fields (ConsGold), T. Boone Pickens,<br />

Minorco, Hanson Industries and Sir James<br />

Goldsmith – who seek to break <strong>Newmont</strong> apart<br />

and sell its assets to increase shareholder value.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> faces tumultuous times as it works to<br />

thwart these five takeover bids. While eventually<br />

successful, these battles leave <strong>Newmont</strong> in<br />

significant debt, requiring that it divest its<br />

non-gold assets. Remaining is <strong>Newmont</strong>’s<br />

Carlin Trend in Nevada as its primary asset with<br />

fledgling operations in Peru and Uzbekistan.<br />

Above: Sir Rudolph Agnew<br />

<strong>of</strong> ConsGold initially attempts<br />

a takeover. Eventually,<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> (headed by<br />

then-CEO Gordon Parker)<br />

and ConsGold join forces<br />

and together they battle<br />

additional takeover attempts<br />

by T. Boone Pickens and<br />

Minorco.<br />

To increase shareholder value, <strong>Newmont</strong> expands<br />

globally and renews its focus on gold. <strong>Newmont</strong><br />

makes major investments in Nevada, Australia,<br />

Peru, Indonesia and Ghana; forms a joint venture<br />

gold project in Zarafshan, Uzbekistan; then engages<br />

in four acquisitions and mergers beginning in<br />

1997, becoming the world’s largest gold producer<br />

from 2002-2006.<br />

In 2007, <strong>Newmont</strong> seeks to take advantage <strong>of</strong><br />

rising gold prices by shedding its non-core assets<br />

and acquiring Miramar <strong>Mining</strong> <strong>Corporation</strong> and<br />

its Hope Bay project in Nunavut, Canada. The<br />

company also eliminates its 1.5 million ounce<br />

legacy hedge book to make <strong>Newmont</strong> the world’s<br />

largest unhedged gold producer. Also in 2007,<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> becomes the first gold company<br />

listed on the Dow Jones Sustainability World<br />

Index, the premier sustainability index tracking<br />

the performance <strong>of</strong> 2,500 leading companies,<br />

worldwide.<br />

Steadily rising gold prices, coupled with a renewed<br />

focus on disciplined cost management, allow for<br />

expanding margins in 2008. In addition, despite<br />

rising cost pressures, the Yanacocha gold mill and<br />

the Nevada TS Power Plant are completed on<br />

time and on budget.<br />

Right top: 2006 – <strong>Newmont</strong> returns to Africa for the first time in decades and opens the Ahafo gold<br />

mine in Ghana.<br />

Right bottom: 1999 – Production begins at Batu Hijau, Indonesia.<br />

In the Beginning Era <strong>of</strong> Expansion<br />

When mine promoter and<br />

financier Colonel William<br />

Boyce Thompson decides<br />

to create the <strong>Newmont</strong><br />

Company in 1916 to handle<br />

his larger private acquisitions<br />

– spanning oil and gas, mining and even hats –<br />

he names the company based on the wealth<br />

he created in New York and his love for his<br />

home state <strong>of</strong> Montana.<br />

After taking his company public in 1925,<br />

Thompson sees the share price skyrocket<br />

from $40 to $236 in just four years. Thanks<br />

to the purchase <strong>of</strong> the Empire-Star Mines in<br />

California, <strong>Newmont</strong> continues to operate<br />

during the Great Depression after President<br />

Franklin D. Roosevelt increases the fixed<br />

price <strong>of</strong> gold from $20 per ounce to $35.<br />

The company also becomes a shareholder<br />

<strong>of</strong> Magma Copper – one <strong>of</strong> the largest<br />

copper producers in the United States – and<br />

acquires the Idarado and Resurrection mining<br />

companies in Colorado to mine gold, lead,<br />

zinc and copper.<br />

Clockwise: Circa 1910 – William Boyce Thompson, founder,<br />

at Magma Copper. 1983 – Magma Copper refinery. 1981 –<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> forms the Atlantic Cement Company to provide<br />

cement to the construction industry on the East Coast.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> spends the next three decades<br />

growing steadily by acquiring new operations<br />

and diversifying its mining portfolio through<br />

joint ventures with established mining companies<br />

to include copper, gold and other minerals.<br />

The company experiments with new processing<br />

techniques for metals such as nickel and lithium,<br />

creates the largest cement plant in the United States<br />

and refines copper for use in the automotive<br />

industry. In all, <strong>Newmont</strong> grows its operations,<br />

producing 28 different products from mines,<br />

wells, plants and refineries in the United States,<br />

Canada, Africa, Peru and elsewhere.<br />

In Nevada, <strong>Newmont</strong> discovers the world’s first<br />

submicroscopic or “invisible” gold at Carlin<br />

in the early 1960s and begins production<br />

on the first open pit gold mine in the world.<br />

Its mines on the Carlin Trend are the first in<br />

North America to produce 1 million ounces<br />

in a year. Carlin becomes the foundation <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Newmont</strong>’s rise in the world gold market.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> <strong>Mining</strong> <strong>Corporation</strong>’s rich legacy spans most <strong>of</strong> the<br />

20th century and is intimately linked to many <strong>of</strong> the key industrial<br />

milestones <strong>of</strong> the 1900s.<br />

Our company’s story begins with <strong>Newmont</strong> managing private mining<br />

investments, while adapting, over the years, to meet growing global<br />

demand for natural resources and to drive industry innovation.<br />

Today, <strong>Newmont</strong>’s vision is to become The Gold Company <strong>of</strong><br />

Choice through industry leading performance as our more than<br />

34,000 employees and contractors mine gold in nine countries<br />

on five continents.<br />

As one <strong>of</strong> a relatively small number <strong>of</strong> companies still listed on the<br />

New York Stock Exchange since joining in 1940, <strong>Newmont</strong> continues<br />

to create value and opportunities for our shareholders, employees and<br />

host communities.<br />

In 2007, this value creation is further recognized as <strong>Newmont</strong><br />

becomes the first and only gold company listed on the Dow Jones<br />

Sustainability World Index. Then, in 2008, we are selected to<br />

provide responsibly sourced gold for Wal-Mart’s traceable, mine-tomarket<br />

Love, Earth® jewelry line.<br />

I invite you to read more about <strong>Newmont</strong>’s diverse and storied past,<br />

and the remarkable foundation upon which our company was built.<br />

I hope you will reflect on <strong>Newmont</strong>’s legacy <strong>of</strong> innovation and the<br />

role each <strong>of</strong> us will play in writing the next chapter.<br />

Sincerely,<br />

President and CEO<br />

Clockwise from top right: Circa 1925 – William Boyce Thompson,<br />

founder. 1982 – Drag line along coal seam at Peabody Coal’s<br />

Sinclair Mine. 1965 – CEO Plato Malozem<strong>of</strong>f pouring the first gold<br />

bar at Carlin, Nev. 1983 – Magma Copper mine and refinery.<br />

A <strong>Legacy</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Innovation</strong>


Honoring our past Planning for our future<br />

1916<br />

William Boyce Thompson<br />

establishes <strong>Newmont</strong> Company<br />

to manage his expanding portfolio<br />

<strong>of</strong> mining investments. Although<br />

headquartered in New York, it<br />

incorporates in Maine.<br />

1917<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> makes its first major<br />

gold investment by taking a<br />

founding 25 percent interest in<br />

Anglo American <strong>Corporation</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

South Africa.<br />

1921<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> Company<br />

reincorporates in Delaware<br />

as <strong>Newmont</strong> <strong>Corporation</strong>.<br />

This becomes the company’s<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficial birth date.<br />

1925<br />

Renamed <strong>Newmont</strong> <strong>Mining</strong><br />

<strong>Corporation</strong>, <strong>Newmont</strong> goes<br />

public with shares trading on<br />

the Curb Exchange. It operates<br />

like a mutual fund, buying and<br />

selling stock in mining and oil<br />

companies.<br />

1928<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> acquires its first shares<br />

in Magma Copper, a company<br />

Thompson founded in 1910.<br />

Located in eastern Arizona,<br />

Magma becomes a core holding<br />

for nearly 60 years and rises to<br />

become one <strong>of</strong> the world’s largest<br />

copper producers.<br />

1929<br />

Stock peaks at $236 a share<br />

in August, just ahead <strong>of</strong> the<br />

market crash.<br />

1930<br />

Thompson dies at age 61, leaving<br />

a fortune <strong>of</strong> $150 million.<br />

Attorney Charles Ayer, who has<br />

been <strong>Newmont</strong>’s president since<br />

1926, takes the reins. As the<br />

Great Depression deepens,<br />

dividends and salaries are cut.<br />

Ayer takes no pay for his remaining<br />

years <strong>of</strong> service.<br />

1935<br />

President Franklin D. Roosevelt<br />

fixes the price <strong>of</strong> gold at $35 an<br />

ounce (up from $20) to help stabilize<br />

the economy. This makes gold<br />

mining pr<strong>of</strong>itable in the U.S. The<br />

price holds until 1971, when gold<br />

trades at free market prices.<br />

1934-35<br />

In Canada, <strong>Newmont</strong> acquires<br />

three gold properties: Northern<br />

Empire Mines Company, Island<br />

Mountain and Berens Rivers Mines.<br />

1940<br />

The Wall Street Journal reports<br />

that <strong>Newmont</strong> “makes its bow”<br />

on the New York Stock Exchange.<br />

In the first day <strong>of</strong> trading, 100<br />

blocks <strong>of</strong> 100 shares each<br />

exchange hands. The closing<br />

stock price is $73-1/8.<br />

1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s<br />

Late 1920s<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> holds large positions<br />

in Kennecott Copper, Hudson Bay<br />

<strong>Mining</strong> and Smelting, Texas Gulf<br />

Sulphur, Continental Oil, Standard<br />

Oil <strong>of</strong> California, Standard Oil <strong>of</strong><br />

Indiana, and eight other mining<br />

and petroleum companies – three<br />

<strong>of</strong> them in South Africa.<br />

1929<br />

The stock market crashes,<br />

throwing the country into the<br />

Great Depression.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> acquires a controlling<br />

interest in California’s two<br />

largest gold mines—the Empire<br />

and the North Star—which, with<br />

other gold mines in the U.S. and<br />

Canada, sustain the company<br />

during the Great Depression.<br />

1932<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> is forced to eliminate<br />

dividends to shareholders and<br />

stock prices tumble to an all-time<br />

low as demand for metals and<br />

oil falls.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> Oil Company is<br />

launched to explore Texas<br />

and Louisiana for oil reserves.<br />

1937-39<br />

In Colorado, <strong>Newmont</strong> acquires<br />

two lead and zinc mines—<br />

Resurrection and Idarado—and<br />

in South Africa, opens the O’okiep<br />

Copper Mine (pictured). Later,<br />

with Tsumeb in South West Africa<br />

(now Namibia) and Palabora, a<br />

South African copper mine, some<br />

<strong>of</strong> these ventures support the<br />

Allied efforts during World War II<br />

and become the mainstay <strong>of</strong> the<br />

company through the early 1970s.<br />

1942<br />

U.S. enters World War II after the<br />

Japanese attack Pearl Harbor. The<br />

government halts gold mining to<br />

reassign workers to produce more<br />

strategic metals.<br />

1942<br />

As America enters World War II,<br />

Fred Searls, Jr., <strong>Newmont</strong>’s VP<br />

<strong>of</strong> Exploration, becomes a “dollar-<br />

a-year” man with an <strong>of</strong>fice in the<br />

White House, dividing his time<br />

and contributing his talents to<br />

the war effort.<br />

1945<br />

Plato Malozem<strong>of</strong>f, a Russian<br />

emigrant and metallurgist, joins<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> as a staff engineer at<br />

a salary <strong>of</strong> $4,200 a year.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong>’s headquarters at 14<br />

Wall Street has 10 <strong>of</strong>fices, each<br />

occupied by a member <strong>of</strong> the<br />

board <strong>of</strong> directors.<br />

1947-49<br />

Searls, who travels the world in<br />

search <strong>of</strong> new mining ventures for<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong>, becomes president and<br />

Ayer is named chairman.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> acquires an abandoned<br />

copper-lead-zinc mine at Tsumeb<br />

in South West Africa.<br />

Subsidiary <strong>Newmont</strong> Oil is asked<br />

by cash-strapped Mobil to help<br />

finance <strong>of</strong>fshore drilling in the<br />

Gulf <strong>of</strong> Mexico, setting <strong>of</strong>f a joint<br />

venture that lasts nearly 40 years.<br />

1951<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> invests $13 million<br />

in Sherritt Gordon Mines Limited<br />

in Manitoba, Canada, to help<br />

develop a process that would<br />

yield copper, zinc, cobalt and<br />

ammonium sulfate fertilizer.<br />

Eventually, Sherritt becomes<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the largest nickel producers<br />

in the world.<br />

1954<br />

Malozem<strong>of</strong>f is named president<br />

and CEO; Searls becomes<br />

chairman. Malozem<strong>of</strong>f presides<br />

over 30 years <strong>of</strong> expansion and<br />

diversification as <strong>Newmont</strong><br />

invests in mines and mineral<br />

ventures around the world. Some<br />

<strong>of</strong> the biggest names in copper,<br />

lead, zinc, lithium, uranium and<br />

even cement become part <strong>of</strong> the<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> portfolio.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> moves its corporate<br />

<strong>of</strong>fices to 300 Park Avenue.<br />

1955<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> joins Phelps Dodge,<br />

American Smelting and Refining,<br />

and Cerro de Pasco to form the<br />

Southern Peru Copper <strong>Corporation</strong>.<br />

With strong support from the<br />

U.S. government, <strong>Newmont</strong> takes<br />

a majority interest in the Dawn<br />

<strong>Mining</strong> Company, which opens a<br />

uranium oxide mine and mill in<br />

Washington state.<br />

1956-57<br />

Magma Copper opens the<br />

San Manuel mine near Tucson,<br />

which becomes the largest<br />

underground copper mine in<br />

the country. <strong>Newmont</strong> acquires<br />

control <strong>of</strong> Magma in 1961.<br />

The Danbury, Conn., research<br />

facility opens and, along with a<br />

geophysical lab in Jerome, Ariz.,<br />

becomes home to some <strong>of</strong> the<br />

industry’s top scientists.<br />

1960<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> forms the Atlantic<br />

Cement Company to provide<br />

cement to the construction<br />

industry on the East Coast.<br />

Jack Thompson (not related to the<br />

founder) escapes Cuba, where he<br />

has worked for 15 years. Turning<br />

down an <strong>of</strong>fer by ‘Che’ Guevara<br />

to become head <strong>of</strong> mining under<br />

Fidel Castro, he joins <strong>Newmont</strong><br />

and becomes president in 1974.<br />

1962-64<br />

Geologists John Livermore and<br />

J. Alan Coope discover gold at<br />

Carlin, Nev. It’s the world’s first<br />

discovery <strong>of</strong> submicroscopic,<br />

disseminated gold and<br />

revolutionizes the gold<br />

industry. Production begins<br />

in 1965.<br />

Margaret Downey, granddaughter<br />

<strong>of</strong> William Boyce Thompson and,<br />

according to newspaper accounts,<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the richest women in<br />

America with holdings in<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> and Magma, dies at<br />

age 42. She is succeeded on the<br />

board by her daughter, Catherine<br />

Hohenlohe, who at 22 becomes<br />

the company’s youngest director.<br />

She serves eight years.<br />

1965<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> Proprietary is<br />

incorporated to explore for<br />

minerals in the Southwest Pacific.<br />

May 4 – The first gold bar is<br />

poured at the Carlin gold mine<br />

near Elko, Nev.<br />

1970-71<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> celebrates its 50th<br />

anniversary with revenues <strong>of</strong><br />

$241 million and net income<br />

<strong>of</strong> $55 million. Shareholders<br />

receive $25 million in dividends.<br />

An original share <strong>of</strong> stock costing<br />

$40 is now worth $14,000.<br />

1973-74<br />

Geologist David Tyrwhitt<br />

discovers the Telfer gold deposit<br />

in Australia’s Great Sandy Desert.<br />

Production begins in 1977 and by<br />

the mid-1980s, Telfer is the largest<br />

gold mine in the country.<br />

After more than 40 years, <strong>Newmont</strong><br />

sells the Empire-Star Mines,<br />

equipment and buildings to the<br />

California Department <strong>of</strong> Parks<br />

and Recreation for $1.25 million,<br />

but retains the mineral rights.<br />

1980<br />

The price <strong>of</strong> gold reaches a<br />

high <strong>of</strong> $850 per ounce.<br />

1980-82<br />

Gold Quarry is discovered at<br />

Carlin. More than 10 million<br />

ounces <strong>of</strong> gold will come from<br />

the mine over the next 25 years.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> fends <strong>of</strong>f a takeover<br />

attempt by Britain’s Consolidated<br />

Gold Fields (ConsGold) by signing<br />

a precedent-setting standstill<br />

agreement that stops its<br />

ownership short <strong>of</strong> control.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> acquires the T Lazy S<br />

Ranch in Nevada, expanding its<br />

Carlin land holdings to 350<br />

square miles.<br />

1987<br />

After six years <strong>of</strong> losses,<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> divests Magma Copper.<br />

Minority interests in the Carlin<br />

and Australian gold operations<br />

are sold to the public.<br />

Flush with cash and selling at<br />

a discount to its net worth,<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> is the target <strong>of</strong> corporate<br />

raider T. Boone Pickens. It fends<br />

<strong>of</strong>f the attack by paying out a<br />

special dividend <strong>of</strong> $2.2 billion,<br />

or $33 per share, and then spends<br />

the next two years selling <strong>of</strong>f<br />

non-gold assets to cover the debt.<br />

1990<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> sells its interest in<br />

Peabody Coal to the Hanson Trust,<br />

thereby becoming, for the<br />

first time, a pure gold company.<br />

Sir James Goldsmith, a<br />

swashbuckling British/French<br />

billionaire, swaps timber land in<br />

the U.S. for the Hanson Trust’s<br />

interest in <strong>Newmont</strong>, now owning<br />

approximately 42 percent <strong>of</strong> the<br />

company. He sells <strong>of</strong>f shares a<br />

few years later, when the price<br />

<strong>of</strong> gold drops.<br />

1996<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> celebrates its 75th<br />

anniversary.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> makes a hostile bid for<br />

Santa Fe Pacific Gold, beating a<br />

friendly <strong>of</strong>fer by Homestake <strong>Mining</strong><br />

in early 1997. Success substantially<br />

increases production, reserves and<br />

acreage in Nevada.<br />

1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s<br />

1966-69<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> acquires a 33 percent<br />

interest in Foote Mineral Company,<br />

a major producer <strong>of</strong> iron alloys<br />

and lithium products.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> acquires all <strong>of</strong> Magma<br />

Copper, a wholly owned subsidiary<br />

with earnings <strong>of</strong> more than<br />

$26 million.<br />

1971<br />

President Richard Nixon takes the<br />

dollar <strong>of</strong>f the gold standard and<br />

returns gold to the free market.<br />

1977<br />

CEO Plato Malozem<strong>of</strong>f organizes<br />

a consortium to acquire Peabody<br />

Coal. At the time, it is the<br />

largest corporate buyout in<br />

American history.<br />

In the southern region <strong>of</strong> Africa,<br />

O’okiep and Tsumeb are the first<br />

mines to eliminate the dual wage<br />

scale for black and white workers.<br />

1986<br />

Gordon Parker, a South African<br />

mining engineer, is named CEO.<br />

He succeeds Malozem<strong>of</strong>f, who<br />

served as chief executive for<br />

more than 30 years.<br />

1988<br />

Another takeover looms as<br />

Minorco, an affiliate <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Oppenheimer South African<br />

empire, strikes at ConsGold,<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong>’s largest shareholder.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> joins ConsGold in a<br />

series <strong>of</strong> legal maneuvers to<br />

preserve its independence.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> moves its corporate<br />

headquarters to Denver.<br />

1989<br />

The Berlin Wall falls, signifying<br />

the breakup <strong>of</strong> the Soviet Union.<br />

1989<br />

Gold production in Nevada reaches<br />

almost 1.5 million ounces, triple<br />

Carlin’s output three years earlier.<br />

It is the first time a U.S. gold<br />

producer exceeds 1 million<br />

ounces in a year. Other gold<br />

producers are also expanding,<br />

and Elko, Nev. becomes the<br />

fastest growing city in America.<br />

ConsGold is acquired by Britain’s<br />

Hanson Trust, which becomes<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong>’s largest shareholder.<br />

1992<br />

Development begins slowly at<br />

Yanacocha in Peru, where gold<br />

near the ancient Inca city <strong>of</strong><br />

Cajamarca is discovered in 1988.<br />

Limited capital is invested due<br />

to risks associated with terrorist<br />

activities <strong>of</strong> the Shining Path<br />

guerillas. Yanacocha becomes<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the lowest cost and largest<br />

gold mines in the world.<br />

1993<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> breaks ground on<br />

a joint venture gold project in<br />

Uzbekistan, the first major Western<br />

investment in the region since<br />

the breakup <strong>of</strong> the Soviet Union.<br />

Never an easy place to operate,<br />

Uzbekistan expropriates the<br />

company’s assets in 2006.<br />

1994<br />

Ronald C. Cambre, a chemical<br />

engineer, becomes the first<br />

outsider to head the company<br />

as Parker retires.<br />

Construction begins at Minahasa,<br />

a small gold mine in Indonesia, in<br />

advance <strong>of</strong> a much larger copper/<br />

gold project at Batu Hijau.<br />

1997<br />

Minera Yanacocha pours its millionth<br />

ounce <strong>of</strong> gold, becoming the largest<br />

gold producer in South America.<br />

1998<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> <strong>Mining</strong> <strong>Corporation</strong><br />

completes the tax-free merger<br />

with <strong>Newmont</strong> Gold Company,<br />

acquiring the remaining 6.25<br />

percent. This is the final step in<br />

the consolidation process between<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> <strong>Mining</strong> and <strong>Newmont</strong><br />

Gold that began in 1994. Up<br />

to this point, both companies<br />

maintained separate listings on<br />

the New York Stock Exchange.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> formally dedicates its<br />

technical facility in Englewood,<br />

Colo., naming it the Malozem<strong>of</strong>f<br />

Technical Facility, marking its one<br />

year anniversary. After moving<br />

from Salt Lake City, the new<br />

technical facility is home<br />

to <strong>Newmont</strong>’s geophysical,<br />

metallurgy, microbiology, analytical<br />

and mineralogy departments.<br />

1999<br />

As the gold price drops to a<br />

20-year low, <strong>Newmont</strong> moves to<br />

maximize production at Yanacocha<br />

and hedges some <strong>of</strong> its future<br />

gold production.<br />

Production begins at the Batu<br />

Hijau copper and gold mine,<br />

putting <strong>Newmont</strong> in the copper<br />

business again for the first time<br />

in 12 years.<br />

2000-02<br />

Wayne W. Murdy, <strong>Newmont</strong>’s<br />

CFO since 1992, succeeds<br />

Cambre as CEO, and is appointed<br />

chairman in 2002.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> acquires Battle<br />

Mountain Gold.<br />

2002<br />

In a challenging three-way merger,<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> acquires Normandy<br />

<strong>Mining</strong> <strong>of</strong> Australia and Franco-<br />

Nevada <strong>of</strong> Canada, becoming the<br />

world’s largest gold producer.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> holds this position<br />

until 2006, when Barrick acquires<br />

Placer Dome.<br />

Pierre Lassonde, who co-founded<br />

Franco-Nevada with Seymour<br />

Schulich in 1982, is appointed<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong>’s president, where<br />

he remains until his resignation<br />

in 2007.<br />

2004<br />

After considering selling its<br />

Ghanaian interests acquired<br />

through the Normandy merger,<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> discovers a major gold<br />

district there defining 16 million<br />

equity ounces <strong>of</strong> gold.<br />

2006<br />

Leeville, <strong>Newmont</strong>’s newest<br />

underground mine, begins<br />

production on the Carlin Trend.<br />

Earnings set a record at $791<br />

million, or $1.75 a share on<br />

revenue <strong>of</strong> $5 billion.<br />

Production begins on the first <strong>of</strong><br />

two projects in Ghana on land<br />

acquired in the Normandy merger.<br />

2007<br />

The price <strong>of</strong> gold surpasses<br />

$850 an ounce for the first time<br />

since 1980.<br />

2007<br />

After more than six years as CEO,<br />

Murdy retires and is succeeded<br />

by Richard O’Brien, who joined<br />

the company as CFO two<br />

years earlier.<br />

O’Brien eliminates <strong>Newmont</strong>’s 1.5<br />

million ounce legacy hedge book<br />

and monetizes its royalty portfolio<br />

to reinvest in <strong>Newmont</strong>’s core<br />

gold business.<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> is listed on the Dow<br />

Jones Sustainability World Index,<br />

the premier sustainability index<br />

tracking the performance <strong>of</strong> 2,500<br />

leading companies, worldwide.<br />

2008<br />

<strong>Newmont</strong> acquires Miramar<br />

<strong>Mining</strong> <strong>Corporation</strong> and its<br />

world-class Hope Bay project in<br />

the Canadian Arctic, one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

largest undeveloped gold deposits<br />

in the world.<br />

2008<br />

On March 13, gold breaches the<br />

$1,000 an ounce mark for the first<br />

time in history.

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