The company will hold an investor conference call to discuss the QB2 project and the transaction at 8:00 a.m. Eastern time / 5:00 a.m. Pacific time on Tuesday, December 4, 2018.
2. Forward Looking Information
Both these slides and the accompanying oral presentations contain certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and forward-looking information within the meaning
of the Securities Act (Ontario) (collectively referred to herein as forward-looking statements). Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or
achievements of Teck to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements.
These forward-looking statements include statements relating to our long-term strategies and priorities, statements regarding the ability or intention to return capital to shareholders, the estimated capital cost of QB2 and amount of Teckās portion
thereof, expectation that Teckās equity funding will not be required until late 2020 and timing of remaining equity funding contributions, statements and expectations regarding expansion and optimization of the project and property, amount of
contingent consideration, expected timing of closing, Teckās āpro formaā copper exposure and estimated EBITDA on the āRebalances Portfolioā, statements regarding QB2 mine life, throughput, timing of first production, amount of production,
costs (including C1 and AISC), expected EBITDA from the project, Teckās expectation that it will have significant free cash flow between 2018 and 2020, Teckās expectation that its solid financial position and return of cash to shareholders will be
maintained throughout QB2 construction, Teckās projected IRR, Teckās expectation that QB2 will have attractive and relatively stable operating costs, projected strip ratio, projected capital intensity, potential resource upside, expectations and
projections regarding QB3 including capacity, and all other projections and expectations regarding the QB2, QB3 and QB2 optimization.
The EV/EBITDA ratios presented in these slides is based on a EBITDA measure sourced from Bloomberg in order to ensure comparability between Teck and the peer groups presented. EV/EBITDA is a metric used in the finance industry to
measure the value of a company and the EBITDA component is not being presented as a measure of historic results.
The forward-looking statements in these slides and accompanying oral presentation are based on assumptions regarding, including, but not limited to, general business and economic conditions, the timing of the receipt of further permits and
approvals for the QB2 project, and receipt of QB3 permit and other governmental and regulatory approvals, assumptions regarding returns of cash to shareholders include assumptions regarding our future business and prospects, other uses for
cash or retaining cash, timing and amount of Teckās equity contributions assume that the project spending does not increase and contributions are required in accordance with the current project schedule, the unescalated contributions and
capital requirements do not include a number of variables that are described in the footnotes to the disclosure and will be greater once those variables are taken into account, the timing of closing of the transaction is subject to customary closing
conditions, including regulatory approvals, and may be delayed and closing might not occur if those closing conditions cannot be satisfied in the time required under the transaction agreement, the final amount of the US$50 million contingent
payment tied to throughput depends on achieving certain throughput targets by December 31, 2025 and is subject to reduction in the event that certain throughput and recovery targets are not achieved, the amount of the contingent payment
regarding QB3 depends on a sanction decision being made by December 31, 2031 and may also be reduced if certain throughput and recovery targets on QB2 are not achieved, the amount of pro forma copper depends on Teck achieving its
projected copper production targets for 2021 and QB2 producing as expected, all QB2 mining and economic projections (QB2 mine life, throughput, timing of first production, amount of production, costs (including C1 and AISC), expected
EBITDA from the project) depend on the QB2 project coming into production in accordance with the current budget and project schedule, the projected capital intensity figures are based on the same assumptions, all of QB2 economic analysis
assume the inferred resources in the sanction case and inferred resources are considered too geologically speculative to be economic, all statements regarding potential extensions of the project depend assume that the extensions will be able
to obtain required permits and will be economic to construct, other assumptions relate to market competition, the accuracy of our reserve estimates (including with respect to size, grade and recoverability) and the geological, operational and
price assumptions on which these are based, conditions in financial markets, the future financial performance of the company, our ability to attract and retain skilled staff, our ability to procure equipment and operating supplies, positive results
from the studies on our expansion projects, our coal and other product inventories, our ability to secure adequate transportation for our products, our ability to obtain permits for our operations and expansions, our ongoing relations with our
employees and business partners and joint venturers. Assumptions are also included in the footnotes to various slides.
Factors that may cause actual results to vary include, but are not limited to, changes in general economic conditions or commodity prices, unanticipated operating, permitting or construction issues including withdrawal or suspension of permits,
unanticipated geotechnical conditions or other factors affecting construction plans and budgets including supplier , transportation, logistics or labour issues, adverse weather or natural disaster, community unrest, access issues, failure of plant
and equipment, disruption of financial markets, delays or problems in receiving further permits and regulatory approvals that may be required as project construction proceeds, inability to satisfy or waive closing conditions to the transaction,
unexpected geotechnical or other issues.
Statements concerning future production costs or volumes are based on numerous assumptions of management regarding operating matters and on assumptions that demand for products develops as anticipated, that customers and other
counterparties perform their contractual obligations, that operating and capital plans will not be disrupted by issues such as mechanical failure, unavailability of parts and supplies, labour disturbances, interruption in transportation or utilities,
adverse weather conditions, and that there are no material unanticipated variations in the cost of energy or supplies. Statements regarding anticipated steelmaking coal sales volumes and average steelmaking coal prices depend on timely
arrival of vessels and performance of our steelmaking coal-loading facilities, as well as the level of spot pricing sales.
We assume no obligation to update forward-looking statements except as required under securities laws. Further information concerning assumptions, risks and uncertainties associated with these forward-looking statements and our business
can be found in our most recent Annual Information Form, as well as subsequent filings of our managementās discussion and analysis of quarterly results and other subsequent filings, all filed under our profile on SEDAR (www.sedar.com) and
on EDGAR (www.sec.gov).
2
3. Project Disclosure
All economic analysis with respect to the QB2 project based on a development case which includes inferred resources within the life of mine plan, referred to as the Sanction Case, which is the case on which Teck is basing its development
decision for the QB2 project. Inferred resources are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as mineral reserves. Inferred resources are subject to
greater uncertainty than measured or indicated resources and it cannot be assumed that they will be successfully upgraded to measured and indicated through further drilling. Nonetheless, based on the nature of the mineralization, Teck has
used a mine plan including inferred resources as the development mine plan for the QB2 project.
The economic analysis of the Sanction Case, which includes inferred resources, may be compared to economic analysis regarding a hypothetical mine plan which does not include the use of inferred resources as mill feed, referred to as the
Reserve Case, and which is set out in Appendix slides 27 and 28.
The scientific and technical information regarding the QB2 project was prepared under the supervision of Rodrigo Marinho, P. Geo, who is an employee of Teck. Mr. Marinho is a qualified person, as defined under National Instrument 43-101.
3
4. Benefits of Partnering
4
ļ¼ Prudent approach to capital allocation
- Choosing measured growth preserves ability to
return further capital to shareholders and reduce
outstanding bonds
ļ¼ Partnership and financing plan dramatically reduces
Teck's QB2 capital requirements
- Teck's share of remaining equity is approximately
US$693 million before escalation1
- No contributions required from closing until late 20202
ļ¼ Significantly enhances Teck's economics bringing
after-tax levered IRR to 30-40%3
ļ¼ Builds on already strong relationship with Sumitomo Metal
Mining and Sumitomo Corporation
5. Benefits of Sanctioning QB2
5
ļ¼ Rebalances Teck's portfolio over time making the
contribution from copper similar to steelmaking coal
ļ¼ World class, low cost copper opportunity in an
excellent geopolitical jurisdiction
ļ¼ First production in late 2021 when copper is expected
to be in deficit
ļ¼ Vast, long life deposit with expansion potential (QB3)
ļ¼ Advanced stage of operational readiness incorporating
leading technology and innovation to create a modern
mine
ļ¼ Experienced team ready to execute together with
industry leading EPCM partner in Bechtel
6. Transaction Terms
6
Upfront Consideration
ā¢ Total contribution of US$1.2 billion into the QB2 project for a 30% interest
- US$800 million earn-in contribution
- US$400 million matching contribution
Contingent Consideration1
ā¢ US$50 million to Teck on QB2 achieving mill throughput optimization target of 154ktpd
ā¢ 12% of the incremental QB3 expansion NPV upon sanction
- 8% contingent earn-in contribution
- 4% matching contribution
Post-Transaction
Project Ownership
ā¢ 60% Teck / 30% Sumitomo / 10% ENAMI
- 25% Sumitomo Metal Mining
- 5% Sumitomo Corporation
Capital Cost Funding
ā¢ US$2.5 billion project financing planned
ā¢ Remaining capital cost funded two-thirds by Teck, one-third by Sumitomo
ā¢ ENAMI has 10% non-funding interest
Conditions & Closing
ā¢ Customary conditions, including regulatory approvals
ā¢ Transaction effective date January 1, 2019
ā¢ Closing expected before April 30, 2019
7. Contingent Consideration on Major Expansion
7
ā¢ Payment of 8% of incremental NPV at sanction to participate in a major project expansion (QB3)
ā¢ To be paid as a contribution to project funding (grossed up to 12% including Sumitomoās one third
share)
ā¢ Various configurations for QB3 analyzed at a conceptual level and scoping study initiated
ā¢ Resource size capable of supporting a doubling of production, potentially more
ā¢ QB3 more capital efficient than QB2 since no new tailings facility required for 10-15 years and other
infrastructure already in place
ā¢ Strip ratio remains low
ā¢ Could sanction as early as 2024 (subject to permitting, environmental and community
considerations)
Ascribes Material Value to Potential Expansion
8. 5.5x - 6.5x
3.1x
5.5x
3.9x
Teck Excl.
QB
Teck Current
Multiple
Current
Comparable
Company
Average
Teck
Historical
Multiple
Unlocking Hidden Value
8
ā¢ Teck trading well below peer average multiple
ā¢ Assuming contingent consideration reflects a doubling of
capacity with QB3, transaction implies value of
~US$3 billion3 for Teckās 90% interest in QB compared with
analyst consensus NAV estimates of ~US$1.2 billion4
- Difference of ~US$1.8 billion implies additional
value of over US$3.00/share5
ā¢ Highlights hidden value of Teckās copper growth portfolio
which also includes Project Satellite and other assets
Significant share price upside based on current
EV / EBITDA multiple relative to peers and lack of value
ascribed to Teck's other copper development assets
Value PotentialEV / 2019E EBITDA1
Adjusting for
value of QB
Comparable company average includes diversified peers (Anglo American,
BHP, Glencore, Rio Tinto, South32 and Vale) and North American peers
(Freeport-McMoRan, First Quantum and Southern Copper)
2
9. 287
174
287
577
2017A Pro Forma
Teck 2017A QB2 Attrib. (60%) QB2 Consolidated (100%)
Rebalances Portfolio
9
Delivers on Copper Growth Strategy
2
Based on Sanction Case (Including 199Mt Inferred Resources)
Refer to Appendix for Reserve Case (Excluding Inferred Resources)
The description of the QB2 project Sanction Case includes inferred resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic
considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as mineral reserves. Inferred resources are subject to greater uncertainty than
measured or indicated resources and it cannot be assumed that they will be successfully upgraded to measured and indicated through further drilling
Teck's Annual Copper Production (kt Cu)
290kt2
ļ¼ Rebalances Teck's portfolio over time to make the
contribution from copper similar to steelmaking coal
ļ¼ On a consolidated basis copper production is doubled
ļ¼ On an attributable basis copper production increases
by ~60%
ļ¼ Based on expected long term prices for copper and
steelmaking coal, increased copper production could
reduce steelmaking coal to below 50% of EBITDA
over time
ļ¼ QB3 and other copper development projects could
further increase copper exposure and diversification
1
1
10. QB2 Project Highlights
10
ļ¼ Vast, long life deposit in favourable jurisdiction
ļ¼ Top 20 producer with top 5 potential through QB3
ļ¼ Very low strip ratio
ļ¼ Low all-in sustaining costs (AISC)
ļ¼ Enhancement (QB2 Prime) and expansion potential (QB3)
ļ¼ Competitive capital intensity
ļ¼ High grade, clean concentrates
ļ¼ Permitted with engineering ~80% complete and construction ready
ļ¼ Community agreements in place and strong local relationships
World Class Development
Chile
Peru
Bolivia
TarapacĆ”
Region
Arica y
Parinacota
Region
Antofagasta
Region
Arica
Iquique
QB2
Collahuasi
Anglo American,
Glencore, Mitsui
El Abra
Freeport-McMoRan,
Codelco
Radomiro
Tomic
Codelco Chuquicamata
Codelco
Ministro
Hales
Codelco
Cerro
Colorado
BHP
Spence
BHP
Centinela
Antofagasta, Marubeni
Gabriela Mistral
Codelco
Escondida
BHP, Rio Tinto, Mitsubishi Argentina
Sierra Gorda
KGHM, SMM, Sumitomo
Location
11. World Class Copper Opportunity1
11
Project
Metrics
(100%)
US$2.4-$4.2B
After-Tax NPV8%
2,3
14%-18%
Unlevered After-Tax IRR2,3
US$1.1-$1.4B
First 5 Full Years Annual EBITDA2
316 kt
First 5 Full Years Annual CuEq Production4
US$1.28/lb
First 5 Full Years C1 Cash Cost (net of by-products)5
US$1.38/lb
First 5 Full Years AISC (net of by-products)6
QB2 Uses <25% of R&R
Continuing to Grow
US$4.7B
Capital Cost (100%)7
Transaction
Metrics
~US$3B
Implied Value of Teck's 90% Interest8
30%-40%
Teck's Levered After-Tax IRR Post Transaction2,3,9
Based on Sanction Case (Including 199Mt Inferred Resources)
Refer to Appendix for Reserve Case (Excluding Inferred Resources)
The description of the QB2 project Sanction Case includes inferred resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic
considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as mineral reserves. Inferred resources are subject to greater uncertainty than
measured or indicated resources and it cannot be assumed that they will be successfully upgraded to measured and indicated through further drilling
12. $4,739
$2,500
$1,200
$346 $693
QB2 Capital Cost Project Finance Contribution from
Sumitomo
Remaining
Sumitomo Equity
Remaining Teck
Equity
Prudent Balance Sheet Management
12
Maintaining Solid Financial Position
ā¢ Teck intends to fund its share of required equity
capital through cash on hand and free cash flow
ā No cash requirement from Teck post
closing until late 20201
ā Significant free cash flow anticipated
between 2018 and 2020
ā Current liquidity of approximately
C$7 billion, including C$1.7 billion in cash
and undrawn US$4 billion credit facility
ā Only US$117 million in debt maturities
through 2021
ā¢ Transaction preserves Teck's solid financial
position and ability to return cash to shareholders
through QB2 construction
QB2 Development Funding
QB2 Capital Costs Before Escalation (US$M)2
After transaction proceeds and
project financing, Teck's share
of remaining equity capital
before escalation is only
approximately US$693 million3
2
3
13. 19%
30%
21%
35%
24%
40%
Unlevered Levered
$3.00 $3.25 $3.50Copper Price (US$/lb):
$193
$435$97
$1,200
$217
$1,793 $640
$290
$1,232
$1,843
$1,292
$82
2019E Pre-Closing 2019E Post-Closing 2020E 2021E 2022E
Teck Contribution Sumitomo Contribution Project Finance
Increasing Teck's Returns
13
Enhancing IRR Reducing Teck's Equity Contributions
Teck's Equity Contributions Before Escalation (US$M)3
Based on Sanction Case (Including 199Mt Inferred Resources)
Refer to Appendix for Reserve Case (Excluding Inferred Resources)
The description of the QB2 project Sanction Case includes inferred resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic
considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as mineral reserves. Inferred resources are subject to greater uncertainty than
measured or indicated resources and it cannot be assumed that they will be successfully upgraded to measured and indicated through further drilling
Transaction proceeds and project financing reduce Teck's equity contributions to
~US$693 million4 with no contributions required post-closing until late 20205
Sumitomo to
contribute
true-up post
closing
Transaction with Sumitomo and US$2.5 billion project
financing significantly enhances Teck's IRR
Teck's Post Transaction After-Tax IRR (%)1
(Assumes Closing at End of Q1 2019E)
2
14. Competitive Cost Position
14
Competitive Operating Cost &
Capital Intensity
ā¢ Given the exceptionally low strip ratio, consistent grade profile,
compact site layout, and high level of automation, QB2 is
expected to have attractive and relatively stable operating costs
ā¢ Exceptional strip ratio of 0.70 LOM, meaning for every one
tonne of ore mined, only 0.70 tonnes of waste need to be
mined (0.44 over first 5 full years)
ā Compares to other world class asset strip ratios of 3.5 for
Antamina, 3.1 for Collahuasi, and 2.5 for Escondida1
ā Major benefit to sustaining capital since it reduces mobile
fleet size and replacement costs
ā¢ Capital intensity of ~US$15k/tpa copper equivalent is in line or
lower than recent comparably sized projects with the ability to
amortize these costs over a very long mine life2
Low Cash Cost Position
Based on Sanction Case (Including 199Mt Inferred Resources)
Refer to Appendix for Reserve Case (Excluding Inferred Resources)
The description of the QB2 project Sanction Case includes inferred resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic
considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as mineral reserves. Inferred resources are subject to greater uncertainty than
measured or indicated resources and it cannot be assumed that they will be successfully upgraded to measured and indicated through further drilling
Antamina
Escondida
Collahuasi
-
0.50
1.00
1.50
2.00
2.50
3.00
3.50
- 25% 50% 75% 100%
US$/lb
Cumulative Paid Metal (%)
AISC C1 Cash Cost
QB2
(first 5 full years)
US$1.38/lb
QB2
(first 5 full years)
US$1.28/lb
C1 Cash Cost3 & AISC4 Curve (US$/lb, 2023E)1
15. 1,202 1,259 1,202
1,325 1,472
199
2,141
3,393
Sanction Case Mine
Plan Tonnage
2017 Annual
Information Form
2018 Updated
Resource Tonnage
P&P M&I (Exclusive) Inferred
Vast, Long Life Deposit
15
ā¢ Resource exclusive of Reserve increased 40% since
2017
ā¢ Initial 28 year mine life processes <25% of the
currently defined Reserve and Resource Tonnage
ā¢ Deposit is capable of supporting a very long mine life
based on throughput rate of 143ktpd by utilizing
further tailings capacity at already identified sites
ā¢ Actively evaluating potential options to exploit value of
full resource through mill expansion and / or mine life
extension
ā¢ Beyond the extensive upside included in the defined
QB deposit, the district geology is highly prospective
for exploration discovery and resource addition
ā Mineralization is open in multiple directions with
drilling ongoing
QB2 Uses Less than 25% of R&R
Reserve and Resource Tonnage (Mt)
Extension Potential
<25% of current
Reserve and
Resource
Tonnage
1
+40%
16. Enhancement and Expansion Potential
16
QB3 ExpansionQB2 Prime Enhancement
ā¢ Focuses on debottlenecking and continuous
improvement through various optimization
initiatives, including:
ā Concentrator throughput: targeting
154ktpd through process optimization and
incremental debottlenecking initiatives
ā Autonomous haulage systems will drive
further benefits and leverage Teck and
industry learnings
ā Mine plan optimization: 9th phase replaces
lower grade feed
ā Ore sorting: application of new technology
to increase feed grade and reduce dilution
ongoing at other Teck sites
ā¢ Limited capital and permitting requirements
ā¢ Deposit is large enough to support the doubling of throughput, or more, which would make QB3
a top 5 copper producer globally
ā¢ Expect significantly lower upfront capital cost compared to QB2 of over US$1B, with new tailings
facility (TMF) not required for 10-15 years, plus other potential synergies
ā¢ Scenarios reviewed to date outline realistic growth options, with the following key components:
ā Resource and mining: straightforward mine phase expansions, available waste dump
space
ā Concentrator capacity: further studies will define optimum capacity but resource size
supports at least the doubling of initial throughput
ā Tailings management: already identified potential sites for future TMF options
ā Permitting: new EIA required in addition to existing permits
ā¢ Vast deposit could support throughput capacity of over 400ktpd, similar to some of the largest
copper operations globally
Enhancing economics of QB2 with
limited capital outlay
Expansion of operations to realize the full potential of the QB resource
which could make QB3 Teck's most attractive project
17. Permitted and De-Risked
17
Construction Ready Leveraging QB1 Permitted
25 Years
Operating experience
in region
EIA
Approved
0.44
Strip ratio over first 5
full years (0.70 LOM)
Existing Fleet
& Workforce
~80%
Detailed Engineering
Complete
>70%
Procurement
Advanced
ā¢ Significantly reduced capital cost risk
- Detailed engineering ~80% complete
- Procurement over 70% advanced
with major equipment in fabrication
- Contracting well advanced
- Major mass earthworks contracts
awarded
- Construction camp contracts awarded
and in fabrication
ā¢ Field activities underway
- Access roads and concentrator mass
earthworks commenced in September
2018
- ~2,000 beds currently available for
construction
ā¢ Ability to leverage the existing assets,
workforce with experience at altitude and
local stakeholder knowledge
ā¢ Existing QB1 operation has effectively
eliminated pre-stripping requirements
resulting in an exceptionally low life of
mine strip ratio for QB2
ā¢ EIA approved in August 2018
ā¢ Sectoral permitting underway and
progressing on schedule
ā¢ Local training and hiring plan for
construction and operation, in
coordination with government and local
communities
ā¢ Significant economic and social benefits
to the country and TarapacĆ” Region
through employment, taxes and
collaborative investments in local
communities
18. Clear Path to Production
18
Construction Approach
ā¢ Key project elements are segregated by area and can be managed more efficiently
reducing risk:
ā Open pit mine (120Mtpa peak);
ā Concentrator (143ktpd);
ā Tailings storage facility (1.4Bt capacity);
ā Concentrate and water supply pipelines (165km); and
ā Port facility (including a desalination plant and concentrate filtration plant)
ā¢ QB will own and operate its pipelines and port facilities
Operational Readiness
ā¢ Early focus on operational readiness and
commissioning to ensure a seamless
transition to operations
ā¢ Organizational design incorporating
Integrated Operations and Business
Partner Model
ā Driving value by linking process,
people and workplace design
ā¢ Engagement of experienced consultants
to support detailed plan development and
execution, integrated operations design
and systems, and commissioning
planning
Port and Desalination
Power
Pipelines
TMF
Mill Mine
Water Pipeline Concentrate Pipeline Power Line Roads
19. Technology and Innovation
19
Operational improvements and innovations will be geared towards maximizing productivity and achieving top tier labour efficiency
ā¢ Located in Santiago with benefits in safety, productivity, costs, and access to
workforce quality and diversity
ā¢ Leads to optimized operations across the business
ā¢ Implementing systems that promote labour productivity with a focus on
efficiency and data integration across key functions
ā¢ Ability to use operational data analytics to drive real-time decisions
Advanced Digital Strategy and Systems
Integrated Operating Centre
ā¢ Reduces employees working at altitude, improves fleet performance and
reduces operating costs
ā Performance improvements based on demonstrated opportunities at
other sites
Autonomous Haulage Systems
Desalinated Water
ā¢ The first large-scale use of desalinated seawater for mining in Chileās
TarapacĆ” Region, eliminating freshwater use in operations
21. Summary
21
ļ¼ Prudent approach to capital allocation
- Choosing measured growth preserves ability
to return further capital to shareholders and
reduce outstanding bonds
ļ¼ Partnership and financing plan dramatically
reduces Teck's QB2 capital requirements
- Teck's share of remaining equity is
approximately US$693 million before
escalation1
- No contributions required from closing until
late 20202
ļ¼ Significantly enhances Teck's economics bringing
after-tax levered IRR to 30-40%3
ļ¼ Builds on already strong relationship with
Sumitomo Metal Mining and Sumitomo Corporation
ļ¼ Rebalances Teck's portfolio over time making the
contribution from copper similar to steelmaking coal
ļ¼ World class, low cost copper opportunity in an
excellent geopolitical jurisdiction
ļ¼ First production in late 2021 when copper is expected
to be in deficit
ļ¼ Vast, long life deposit with expansion potential (QB3)
ļ¼ Advanced stage of operational readiness
incorporating leading technology and innovation to
create a modern mine
ļ¼ Experienced team ready to execute together with
industry leading EPCM partner in Bechtel
Benefits of Partnering Benefits of Sanctioning QB2
22. Notes
Slide 4: Benefits of Partnering
1. On a go forward basis from January 1, 2019. Assumes US$2.5 billion in project finance loans without deduction of fees and interest during construction, and US$1.2 billion
contribution from Sumitomo (not including contingent consideration). Based on remaining capital costs of US$4.739 billion in constant Q2 2017 dollars, assuming a CLP:USD
exchange rate of 625, not including escalation (estimated at US$300 - $470 million based on 2 - 3% per annum inflation), working capital or interest during construction, but
including approximately US$500 million in contingency
2. Assumes project finance facility available in Q2 2019, and US$1.2 billion of Sumitomo contributions associated with purchase price spent before first draw. Thereafter, project
finance facility used to fund all capital costs until target debt : capital ratio achieved on a cumulative basis, after which point project finance and equity contributions are made
ratably based on this same debt : capital ratio
3. Range based on US$3.00-$3.50/lb copper price. Assumes US$10.00/lb molybdenum and US$18.00/oz silver. As at January 1, 2019. Assumes optimized funding structure, US$2.5
billion in project finance loans without deduction of fees and interest during construction, and US$1.2 billion contribution from Sumitomo. Does not include contingent consideration
Slide 6: Transaction Terms
1. Sumitomo has agreed to make a supplemental payment to Teck of US$50 million if QB2 project throughput reaches 154,000 tonnes per day prior to the earlier of the sanctioning of
a major expansion or December 31, 2025. Expansion contingent consideration is payable if project expansion sanction occurs before December 31, 2031 and Sumitomo elects to
participate. If Sumitomo elects not to participate in the expansion, its interest in the joint venture will be diluted on a basis that effectively gives Teck 100% of the value of the
expansion. Both these supplemental payments are subject to downward adjustment in the event that QB2 mill throughput and copper recoveries do not meet certain targets
Slide 8: Unlocking Hidden Value
1. Current multiples are as at December 3, 2018. Historical multiples are for the past ten years. Comparable company average based on a combination of Teck's diversified peers and
North American peers. Diversified peers are Anglo American, BHP, Glencore, Rio Tinto, South32 and Vale. North American Peers are Freeport-McMoRan, First Quantum and
Southern Copper. EV/EBITDA multiples are unweighted averages based on data reported by Bloomberg as at December 3, 2018, and are total enterprise value to 2019E EBITDA
2. Calculated as Teck's enterprise value of ~US$15.3 billion, less ~US$3 billion implied value for QB, divided by 2019 analyst consensus EBITDA estimate of ~US$4.0 billion based
on data reported by Bloomberg as at December 3, 2018
3. The valuation of approximately ~US$3 billion for Teckās 90% interest is based on a transaction value of US$1 billion comprising an earn-in contribution of US$800 million and
assumed contingent consideration proceeds with a present value of approximately US$200 million. The undiscounted contingent consideration is estimated at US$300 million and
comprises: (a) US$50 million relating to achieving the mill throughput optimization target as described in Note 1 to Slide 6, assumed to be received in 2024; and (b) 8% of the net
present value of the QB3 expansion at sanction, assuming an expansion sanctioned in 2024 which doubles QB2 throughput with further tailings facility construction deferred. At a
real copper price of US$3.00/lb, the payment is estimated at approximately US$250 million. Using a real discount rate of 8%, the present value of the contingent consideration,
based on the above assumptions is estimated at approximately US$200 million. This estimate is based on a number of significant assumptions in addition to those described
above. There can be no assurance that the contingent consideration will approximate the amounts outlined above, or that it will be received at all
4. Based on average of analysts who publish a segmented NAV estimate for QB
5. Calculated as ~US$3 billion implied value for QB, less ~US$1.2 billion analyst consensus NAV estimate, divided by ~575 million shares outstanding
22
23. Notes
Slide 9: Rebalances Portfolio
1. We include 100% of the production and sales from QB and Carmen de Andacollo mines in our production and sales volumes because we fully consolidate their results in our
financial statements. We include 22.5% of production and sales from Antamina, representing our proportionate equity interest in Antamina. Copper production includes cathode
production at QB
2. Based on QB2 Sanction Case first five full years of copper production
Slide 11: World Class Copper Opportunity
1. Unless otherwise stated, all metrics assume US$3.00/lb copper, US$10.00/lb molybdenum and US$18.00/oz silver
2. Range based on US$3.00-$3.50/lb copper price
3. As at January 1, 2019. Assumes optimized funding structure
4. Copper equivalent production calculated assuming US$3.00/lb copper, US$10.00/lb molybdenum and US$18.00/oz silver without adjusting for payability
5. C1 cash costs are presented after by-product credits assuming US$10.00/lb molybdenum and US$18.00/oz silver. C1 cash costs include stripping costs during operations
6. Calculated as C1 cash costs after by-product credits plus sustaining capital requirements. C1 cash costs are described above
7. On a 100% go forward basis from January 1, 2019 in constant Q2 2017 dollars and a CLP:USD exchange rate of 625, not including escalation (estimated at US$300 - $470
million based on 2 - 3% per annum inflation), working capital or interest during construction. Includes approximately US$500 million in contingency. At current spot CLP/USD rate
of approximately 675 capital would be reduced by approximately US$270 million
8. The valuation of approximately ~US$3 billion for Teckās 90% interest is based on a transaction value of US$1 billion comprising an earn-in contribution of US$800 million and
assumed contingent consideration proceeds with a present value of approximately US$200 million. The undiscounted contingent consideration is estimated at US$300 million
and comprises: (a) US$50 million relating to achieving the mill throughput optimization target as described in Note 1 to Slide 6, assumed to be received in 2024; and (b) 8% of the
net present value of the QB3 expansion at sanction, assuming an expansion sanctioned in 2024 which doubles QB2 throughput with further tailings facility construction deferred.
At a real copper price of US$3.00/lb, the payment is estimated at approximately US$250 million. Using a real discount rate of 8%, the present value of the contingent
consideration, based on the above assumptions is estimated at approximately US$200 million. This estimate is based on a number of significant assumptions in addition to those
described above. There can be no assurance that the contingent consideration will approximate the amounts outlined above, or that it will be received at all
9. Assumes US$2.5 billion in project finance loans without deduction of fees and interest during construction, and US$1.2 billion contribution from Sumitomo. Does not include
contingent consideration
23
24. Notes
Slide 12: Prudent Balance Sheet Management
1. Assumes project finance facility available in Q2 2019, and US$1.2 billion of Sumitomo contributions associated with purchase price spent before first draw. Thereafter, project
finance facility used to fund all capital costs until target debt : capital ratio achieved on a cumulative basis, after which point project finance and equity contributions are made
ratably based on this same debt : capital ratio
2. On a 100% go forward basis from January 1, 2019 in constant Q2 2017 dollars and a CLP:USD exchange rate of 625, not including escalation (estimated at US$300 - $470
million based on 2 - 3% per annum inflation), working capital or interest during construction. Includes approximately US$500 million in contingency. At current spot CLP/USD rate
of approximately 675 capital would be reduced by approximately US$270 million
3. On a go forward basis from January 1, 2019. Assumes US$2.5 billion in project finance loans without deduction of fees and interest during construction, and US$1.2 billion
contribution from Sumitomo
Slide 13: Increasing Teck's Returns
1. As at January 1, 2019. Assumes optimized funding structure and completion of transaction with Sumitomo. Does not include contingent consideration. Assumes US$10.00/lb
molybdenum and US$18.00/oz silver
2. Assumes US$2.5 billion in project finance loans without deduction of fees and interest during construction, and US$1.2 billion contribution from Sumitomo
3. On a 100% go forward basis from January 1, 2019 in constant Q2 2017 dollars and a CLP:USD exchange rate of 625, not including escalation (estimated at US$300 - $470
million based on 2 - 3% per annum inflation), working capital or interest during construction. Includes approximately US$500 million in contingency. At current spot CLP/USD rate
of approximately 675 capital would be reduced by approximately US$270 million
4. On a go forward basis from January 1, 2019. Assumes US$2.5 billion in project finance loans without deduction of fees and interest during construction, and US$1.2 billion
contribution from Sumitomo
5. Assumes project finance facility available in Q2 2019, and US$1.2 billion of Sumitomo contributions associated with purchase price spent before first draw. Thereafter, project
finance facility used to fund all capital costs until target debt : capital ratio achieved on a cumulative basis, after which point project finance and equity contributions are made
ratably based on this same debt : capital ratio
Slide 14: Competitive Cost Position
1. Source: Wood Mackenzie
2. Based on first five full years of copper equivalent production. Copper equivalent production calculated assuming US$3.00/lb copper, US$10.00/lb molybdenum and US$18.00/oz
silver without adjusting for payability
3. C1 cash costs are presented after by-product credits assuming US$10.00/lb molybdenum and US$18.00/oz silver. C1 cash costs include stripping costs during operations
4. Calculated as C1 cash costs after by-product credits plus sustaining capital requirements. C1 cash costs are described above
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25. Notes
Slide 15: Vast, Long Life Deposit
1. Resources figures as at November 30, 2018. Resources are reported separately from, and do not include that portion of resources classified as reserves. See Appendix for
further details
Slide 21: Summary
1. On a go forward basis from January 1, 2019. Assumes US$2.5 billion in project finance loans without deduction of fees and interest during construction, and US$1.2 billion
contribution from Sumitomo (not including contingent consideration). Based on remaining capital costs of US$4.739 billion in constant Q2 2017 dollars, assuming a CLP:USD
exchange rate of 625, not including escalation (estimated at US$300 - $470 million based on 2 - 3% per annum inflation), working capital or interest during construction, but
including approximately US$500 million in contingency
2. Assumes project finance facility available in Q2 2019, and US$1.2 billion of Sumitomo contributions associated with purchase price spent before first draw. Thereafter, project
finance facility used to fund all capital costs until target debt : capital ratio achieved on a cumulative basis, after which point project finance and equity contributions are made
ratably based on this same debt : capital ratio
3. Range based on US$3.00-$3.50/lb copper price. Assumes US$10.00/lb molybdenum and US$18.00/oz silver. As at January 1, 2019. Assumes optimized funding structure,
US$2.5 billion in project finance loans without deduction of fees and interest during construction, and US$1.2 billion contribution from Sumitomo. Does not include contingent
consideration
25
27. Mine Life years 25 28 28
Throughput ktpd 140 143 143
LOM Mill Feed Mt 1,259 1,400 1,400
Strip Ratio
First 5 Full Years 0.40 0.16 0.44
LOM 0.52 0.41 0.70
Copper Production
First 5 Full Years ktpa 275 286 290
LOM ktpa 238 228 247
Copper Equivalent Production
First 5 Full Years ktpa 301 313 316
LOM ktpa 262 256 279
C1 Cash Cost
First 5 Full Years US$/lb $1.28 $1.29 $1.28
LOM US$/lb $1.39 $1.47 $1.37
AISC
First 5 Full Years US$/lb $1.34 $1.40 $1.38
LOM US$/lb $1.43 $1.53 $1.42
Annual EBITDA
First 5 Full Years US$B $1.0 $1.0 $1.1
LOM US$B $0.8 $0.7 $0.9
NPV @ 8% US$B $1.3 $2.0 $2.4
IRR % 12% 13% 14%
Payback Period years 5.8 5.7 5.6
Mine Life / Payback 4.3 4.9 5.0
Sanction
Case
Reserve
Case
2016 FS
(Reserves)
After-Tax
Economics
General
OperatingMetrics
(AnnualAvg.)
Copper Price (US$/lb) $3.00 $3.25 $3.50
Annual EBITDA (US$B)
First 5 Full Years $1.1 $1.2 $1.4
First 10 Full Years $1.0 $1.1 $1.3
Payback Period (Years) 5.6 4.9 4.4
NPV at 8% (US$B) $2.4 $3.3 $4.2
Project Unlevered IRR (%) 14% 16% 18%
Teck's Unlevered IRR (%) 19% 21% 24%
Teck's Levered IRR (%) 30% 35% 40%
Copper Price (US$/lb) $3.00 $3.25 $3.50
Annual EBITDA (US$B)
First 5 Full Years $1.0 $1.2 $1.3
First 10 Full Years $1.0 $1.1 $1.3
Payback Period (Years) 5.7 5.0 4.4
NPV at 8% (US$B) $2.0 $2.9 $3.7
Project Unlevered IRR (%) 13% 16% 17%
Teck's Unlevered IRR (%) 18% 21% 23%
Teck's Levered IRR (%) 29% 35% 40%
Changes Since Feasibility Study1
Project Economics Comparison
27
Sensitivity Analysis1
4
6
Sanction Case8
5
Reserve Case8
62
2
2
2
2
7 8 8
3
The description of the QB2 project Sanction Case includes inferred resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic
considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as mineral reserves. Inferred resources are subject to greater uncertainty than
measured or indicated resources and it cannot be assumed that they will be successfully upgraded to measured and indicated through further drilling
9
10
6
9
10
2
29. Known Deposit Extends Beyond QB2
29
N
Sanction Case Pit Design
Existing Pit Bottom
Mineralized Footprint
(4km x 2km)
QB2 Pit
(3km x 1.6km)
30. ENAMI Interest
30
Organizational ChartOverview
ā¢ The government of Chile owns a 10% non-funding interest in
CompaƱĆa Minera Teck Quebrada Blanca S.A. (CMTQB) through
its state-run minerals company, Empresa Nacional de MinerĆa
(ENAMI)
ā¢ ENAMI has been a partner at QB since 1989 and is a 10%
shareholder of Carmen de Andacollo
ā¢ ENAMI is not required to fund QB2 development costs
ā¢ Project equity funding in form of:
- 25% Series A Shares
- 75% Shareholder Loans
ā¢ Until shareholder loans are fully repaid, ENAMI is entitled to a
minimum dividend, based on net income, that approximates
2.0-2.5% of free cash flow
- Thereafter, ENAMI receives 10% of dividends / free cash flow
ā¢ ENAMI is entitled to board representation
CMTQB
TRCL
ENAMI
Teck
QB1 / QB2 / QB3
10%
(Series B)
100%
90%
(Series A)
JVCo
SMM
66.67%
100%
33.33%
SC
83.33% 16.67%
Chile HoldCo
31. QB2 Partners
31
Sumitomo CorporationSumitomo Metal Mining
ā¢ Sumitomo Metal Mining Co., Ltd. is a Japan based company
ā¢ Primarily focused on the development and mining of non-ferrous
metals, and produces and markets copper, gold, nickel, and other
precious and non-precious metals
ā¢ Founded in 1590, Sumitomo has been involved with copper
mining for over 420 years
ā¢ Was formerly known as Seika Kogyo (Mining) Co., Ltd. and
changed its name to Sumitomo Metal Mining Co., Ltd. in June
1952
ā¢ Acquired shares in Teck in 1998 and presently holds ~19% of
Teckās Series A shares, representing approximately ~11% of
Teckās voting rights
ā¢ Principal copper assets include interests in Candelaria (16%),
Cerro Verde (17%), Morenci (25%), Northparkes (13%), and
Sierra Gorda (32%)
ā¢ http://www.smm.co.jp/E/
ā¢ Sumitomo Corporation is a Fortune 500 global integrated trading
company
ā¢ Conducts business through six industry-based segments
- Metal Products
- Transportation and Construction Systems
- Infrastructure
- Media & Digital
- Living Related and Real Estate
- Mineral Resources, Energy, Chemical and Electronics
ā¢ Each segment operates with autonomy while also in coordination
with the overall company strategic initiatives
ā¢ Principal copper assets include interests in Candelaria (4%),
Cerro Verde (4%), Morenci (3%), Northparkes (7%), and
Sierra Gorda (14%)
ā¢ https://www.sumitomocorp.com/en/jp
32. Notes: Appendix
Slide 27: Project Economics Comparison
1. Where applicable, all metrics on 100% basis and assume US$3.00/lb copper, US$10.00/lb molybdenum and US$18.00/oz silver unless otherwise stated. NPV, IRR and payback
on after-tax basis
2. Life of Mine annual average figures exclude the first and last partial years of operations
3. Copper equivalent production calculated assuming US$3.00/lb copper, US$10.00/lb molybdenum and US$18.00/oz silver without adjusting for payability
4. C1 cash costs are presented after by-product credits assuming US$10.00/lb molybdenum and US$18.00/oz silver. C1 cash costs include stripping costs during operations
5. Calculated as C1 cash costs after by-product credits plus sustaining capital requirements. C1 cash costs are described above
6. Payback from first production
7. Based on go-forward cash flow from January 1, 2017. Based on all equity funding structure
8. Based on go-forward cash flow from January 1, 2019. Based on optimized funding structure
9. Post-transaction with Sumitomo. Does not consider contingent consideration
10. Post-transaction with Sumitomo and includes impact of US$2.5 billion project financing. Does not consider contingent consideration
Slide 28: Reserves and Resources Comparison
1. Mineral reserves are constrained within an optimized pit shell and scheduled using a variable grade cut-off approach based on NSR cut-off US$13.39/t over the planned life of
mine. The life-of-mine strip ratio is 0.41
2. Both mineral resource and mineral reserve estimates assume long-term commodity prices of US$3.00/lb Cu, US$9.40/lb Mo and US$18.00/oz Ag and other assumptions that
include: pit slope angles of 30ā44Āŗ, variable metallurgical recoveries that average approximately 91% for Cu and 74% for Mo and operational costs supported by the Feasibility
Study as revised and updated
3. Mineral resources are reported using a NSR cut-off of US$11.00/t and include 23.8 million tonnes of hypogene material grading 0.54% copper that has been mined and
stockpiled during existing supergene operations.
4. Mineral reserves are constrained within an optimized pit shell and scheduled using a variable grade cut-off approach based on NSR cut-off US$18.95/t over the planned life of
mine. The life-of-mine strip ratio is 0.70
5. Mineral resources are reported using a NSR cut-off of US$11.00/t outside of the reserves pit. Mineral resources include inferred resources within the reserves pit at a US$ 18.95/t
NSR cut-off and also include 23.8 million tonnes of hypogene material grading 0.54% copper that has been mined and stockpiled during existing supergene operations
32