1917–1990 Ernest Oppenheimer, a Jewish German émigré, founded the Anglo American Corporation (AAC) in 1917 in Johannesburg, South Africa, with financial backing from the American bank
J.P. Morgan & Co. and £1 million raised from UK and US sources to start the gold mining company; this fact is reflected in the company's name. The AAC became the majority
stakeholder in the
De Beers company in 1926, a company formerly controlled by
Alfred Beit, also a Jewish German émigré. In the late 1940s and 1950s, the AAC focused on the development of the
Free State goldfields (seven major mines simultaneously) and the
Vaal Reefs mine. During 1945, the AAC moved into the coal industry by acquiring Coal Estates. Twelve years later, Oppenheimer died in Johannesburg and was succeeded as head of the company by his son
Harry, who also became chairman of De Beers. In 1961, the AAC expanded outside of southern Africa for the first time and became a major investor in
The Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting Company. In 1967, the company moved into the steel industry by acquiring Scaw Metals. From 1967 to 1975, it continued to grow and established a number of ventures, including the
Mondi Group (timber, pulp and paper), Amgold (later
AngloGold Ashanti) and then Amcoal (through the consolidation of several of its mining operations in South Africa; later known as Anglo Coal and in 2010 changed to Anglo Thermal). In 1982, Harry Oppenheimer retired as chairman of the AAC and was succeeded by
Gavin Relly. Two years later, Oppenheimer retired from De Beers and passed the chairmanship to
Julian Ogilvie Thompson, who in 1990 also became chairman and chief executive of the AAC.
1990–2010 On 24 May 1999, Anglo American Corporation merged with
Minorco to form Anglo American plc, with its primary listing on the
London Stock Exchange and a secondary listing on the
Johannesburg Stock Exchange. Its gold mining operations were spun off into the separate
AngloGold corporation, which in 2004 merged with the
Ashanti Goldfields Corporation to form
AngloGold Ashanti. Anglo American reduced its stake in AngloGold Ashanti to 16.6% in 2008. In 2000, Julian Ogilvie Thompson retired as chief executive of Anglo American and was succeeded by
Tony Trahar. Ogilvie Thompson also retired as chairman in 2002 and was replaced by
Mark Moody-Stuart. In the same year, Anglo American acquired
Tarmac, a supplier of building materials, and
Shell Petroleum Company's Australian coal assets. In 2001, De Beers was privatised after being a listed company for more than 70 years. In 2002, South Africa's Mining Charter was approved, and Anglo American and other mining companies with operations in the country were mandated to transfer a percentage of their South African production to historically disadvantaged South Africans. From 2002 to July 2008 Anglo American carried out black community economic empowerment transactions (across all businesses with operations in South Africa) totalling
R26 billion. Also, in 2002, Anglo Base Metals acquired the
Disputada de Las Condes copper operations in Chile from
ExxonMobil and opened a representative office in
Beijing, China. The Diputada de Las Condes purchase became later controversial in Chile when it was made public that Exxon Minerals had purchased the mine from Chilean state-owned
ENAMI for 93 million US$ in 1977 and sold it to Anglo American for 1,300 million US$. In 2003, Anglo American acquired a majority stake in iron ore producer
Kumba Resources. In 2007,
Cynthia Carroll succeeded Tony Trahar, becoming the first non-South African and first female chief executive of Anglo American. The
Mondi Group, a paper and packaging business, was also spun out in 2007. During the next two years, Anglo American opened a representative office in
New Delhi, India, acquired control of the Michiquillay copper project in northern
Peru and the MMX
Minas-Rio and Amapa iron ore projects in
Brazil, and later acquired stakes in the Pebble copper project in
Alaska. In 2007, Anglo American was criticized for a project that threatened to cause environmental damage. In order to complete the Alaskan
Pebble Mine in collaboration with Northern Dynasty Minerals, it considered building a massive dam at the
headwaters of the world's largest
sockeye salmon fishery. Opponents claimed that
cyanide,
heavy metals and
acid mine drainage could have devastating effects on the
Bristol Bay area. Opponents of Pebble Mine created Ballot Measure 4 to impose more stringent water quality standards on new mines, but in August 2007, the initiative was rejected. As of September 2008, the Pebble Limited Partnership had not yet put forward a project proposal and was working to prepare a prefeasibility study for the project in the second half of 2009. The mine proposal would still need to undergo environmental studies and the permitting process, including being subject to state and federal water protections. In December 2013, Anglo American withdrew from the Pebble Limited Partnership.
2010 to 2020 In early November 2011, Anglo American entered into talks with the
Oppenheimer family to divest the latter's remaining shares of De Beers, whereby Anglo American acquired an additional 40% stake for $5.1 billion, increasing their overall stake to 85%. This came at a time of increased labour strikes and international attention to Oppenheimer's involvement in
conflict diamonds. Anglo American then sold a 24.5% share in its main Chilean copper unit,
Anglo American Sur, to Japan's
Mitsubishi Corporation for $5.39 billion, paid with a promissory note due on 10 November 2011. With this deal, the Anglo American Sur complex was valued at $22 billion. By selling a 24.5% stake to Mitsubishi Corporation Anglo American successfully obstructed
Codelco's
option to purchase 49% as the option was reportedly only valid as long as Anglo American held 100% of the company. This option dated to the privatization of
Disputada de Las Condes in 1977. In November 2012, Anglo American completed the sale of steel maker Scaw South Africa and its connected companies for a total of R3.4 billion in cash. In July 2014, Anglo American said it was disposing of its 50% shareholding in
Lafarge Tarmac, a building materials joint venture, to cement maker Lafarge SA for a value of not less than £885 million ($1.5 billion); the sale was subsequently completed in July 2015 for $1.6 billion. In October 2014, Anglo American's
Minas-Rio iron ore project in Brazil began operating and shipping ore. In July 2015, Anglo American announced that it would cut 53,000 jobs (35% of their workforce) and that in the first half of 2015, they had a financial loss of US$3 billion. In early December 2015, the company announced that, as part of a
restructure, it would be cutting a further 85,000 mining jobs, nearly two-thirds of its work force of 135,000, worldwide. It also announced the consolidation of six of its divisions into three businesses, while dividend payouts to investors were also suspended for a year. The company also had its Dawson,
Foxleigh and
Callide coal mines in Central
Queensland, as well as its Dartbrook coal mine in the
Hunter Valley in
New South Wales, put up for sale as its shares dropped to a record low on the
London Stock Exchange, falling by more than 12 per cent. In March 2017, British Indian industrialist
Anil Agarwal purchased 11% of the company through his family trust Volcan. In September, he took the holding to 20% through another purchase worth about $1.5 billion. In April 2017, the company sold its
Eskom-linked thermal coal operations in South Africa for $166 million, marking an important step in the mining giant's strategic overhaul to sharpen its focus on three commodities. In October 2019, Anglo American announced a partnership with French energy company
Engie and engineering firm
First Mode to develop the world's largest hydrogen-powered
mine haul truck.
2020 - Present In January 2020, Anglo American made a 5.5p per share offer to buy a
polyhalite fertiliser project (in
North Yorkshire,
England) from
Sirius Minerals for £400m. In salvaging the financially troubled project, Anglo American envisages spending around £230m to keep construction going. The sale was approved by shareholders in March 2020. In April 2021, Anglo American announced the demerger of Thungela Resources, which will own a series of significant South African thermal coal assets, in order to eliminate the risk of clean-up liabilities. In May 2022, Anglo American and First Mode unveiled the world’s largest
hydrogen powered
mine haul truck at Mogalakwena PGM Mine in northeast South Africa. The project, which is expected to be fully implemented by 2026, is a first step in making eight of the company’s mines
carbon neutral by 2040. The company has set a target of getting all of its operations to that status by 2040. President of the Republic of South Africa,
Cyril Ramaphosa was present at the launch and stated, "Developing the hydrogen economy is a strategic priority for our country."
BHP made an offer to acquire the company for £31 billion in April 2024; however, the offer was rejected by the company as "highly unattractive". In May 2024, a revised offer was made by BHP and subsequently rejected by Anglo American. In November 2024,
Peabody Energy announced plans to acquire the metallurgical coal assets of Anglo American for $3.78 billion. However, the following August, Peabody terminated the deal because a fire at Anglo American's
Moranbah North coal mine constituted a
material adverse change. Peabody sought to renegotiate for a lower price, but the attempt failed. The platinum mining division, was demerged from Anglo American as
Valterra Platinum on 31 May 2025. At the time of its independence and
listing, Valterra was the largest platinum mining company in the world by value and fourth by volume.
Teck Resources merger On 9 September 2025, Anglo American and
Teck Resources announced they had reached an agreement to combine the two companies in a merger of equals to form the Anglo Teck group, a global critical minerals champion and the world's second largest copper producer, headquartered in Canada and expected to offer investors more than 70% exposure to copper. Considering the previous takeover attempt of Anglo American by BHP,
Radio Bío-Bío opined that with this merger Anglo American had gone "from prey to predator". The merger is thought to be particularly impactful for the adjoining copper mines of
Collahuasi and
Quebrada Blanca which could easily integrate operations if owned by the same company. The merger of operations of these two mines depend however on its approval by
Glencore which owns 44% of Collahuasi. In late November 2025, Canadian Industry Minister
Melanie Joly warned that Anglo American's pledges were not enough, and said she thought Canadians should get more out of the merger. Joly is responsible for enforcing Canada's foreign-investment laws, which require government approval for foreign-led mergers and acquisition activity. ==Operations==