By Clara Denina and Yadarisa Shabong
LONDON (Reuters) -Glencore has told Teck Resources shareholders it is willing to improve its $22.5 billion takeover offer, raising pressure on the Canadian miner to ditch a restructuring plan and sit down at the negotiating table.
In an open letter on Wednesday, Glencore (LON:GLEN) said it would consider taking the offer to Teck's shareholders directly if the board failed to engage.
The Swiss miner and trader made its all-share offer as Teck's own plan to spin off its metallurgical coal business and focus on copper and zinc nears an April 26 vote.
The bid is the latest in a mounting wave of mining industry buyout offers fuelled by growing demand for copper and other metals critical to the green energy transition.
Glencore Chief Executive Gary Nagle flew to Canada to meet shareholders last Thursday after revising the unsolicited bid to include up to $8.2 billion in cash.
Teck's board rejected it as too low and one that would unnecessarily expose investors to a large thermal coal business and an unwanted oil trading unit.
Management on Wednesday said Glencore's was "an opportunistic attempt to interfere" with the vote on the spinoff and continued to recommend shareholders to support its restructuring plan.
Nagle said in the open letter: "Glencore has never stated that its proposal is 'best and final' and that it is not willing to make changes and improvement."
"With engagement, we could improve our proposal's terms and value, which would be in the best interests of all Teck shareholders."
Glencore's plan would combine and spin off its thermal coal unit and Teck's steelmaking coal business.
Teck estimated that after its proposed restructuring, shares in the metals business could trade at C$100 ($74.67) or higher, about 55% above the group's closing price on Tuesday.
Glencore's initial bid was made privately on March 26 and represented a 20% premium to that day's closing price.
JP Morgan analysts this week said that Glencore could pay as much as $27.2 billion.
Jefferies analyst Chris LaFemina on Wednesday said that, with no other offer on the table, a deal with Glencore after a bump of at least 10% in the proposed exchange ratio was preferable to an internal restructuring by Teck.
Ben Cleary, portfolio manager at Tribeca Global Natural Resources Fund, told Reuters: "The vote (on Teck's restructuring plan) is highly likely to go through without an official bump in terms (from Glencore)."
But Waratah Capital Advisors said in a statement on Wednesday that it had voted against Teck's proposal.
The Vancouver-based miner operates under a dual-class structure and needs approval from two thirds of shareholders on both sides for the restructuring.
Canada's Keevil family owns the majority of 'A' class of shares, which have more voting power than the numerous 'B' class shares held by institutions.
Teck has said it would explore a corporate transaction or partnership after its restructuring. Sources close to the matter say Teck has had approaches from more than six mining companies interested in its prized metals business.