
1/9/2026

Rio Tinto is circling Glencore again, exploring an all-share deal that would create the world’s biggest miner, a $200‑billion‑plus metals machine.
The catch? It’s unclear what the deal terms are, which assets make the cut, and whether regulators would allow the deal to complete.
Rio Tinto announced its interest on Friday, with investors instantly reading the tea leaves: excitement from Glencore holders with shares up 11% on Friday; nerves from Rio’s with shares down 6%.
Under the UK takeover rules, Rio has a fixed window to make a formal offer. It must make a decision by February 5.

To understand this deal, follow the price of copper. It’s the metal powering everything from electric cars and data centers to solar panels and wind turbines, and demand is set to surge for decades.
Demand is expected to rise 50% by 2040. Supply, meanwhile, is struggling to keep up. That’s why miners are scrambling to bulk up, and why Rio sees Glencore as a fast‑track ticket into copper dominance. A merger would help Rio rely less on iron ore, its cash cow, but not exactly the future.
The deal was last attempted in 2024, but talks ended at an early stage. Rio Tinto now has a new CEO, and the AI boom has lifted the copper price to a new record.
How M&A Plays Out, Step by Step
Every merger has its quirks, but the process usually follows a familiar script.

Mega-deals can be attractive to CEOs interested in their legacy. If Rio and Glencore tie the knot, they’d leapfrog market-leader BHP in market value and instantly reshape global mining.
Hurdles ahead:
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