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Baja Mining Files Complaint Regarding Mount Kellett's Trade Disclosure

23.02.2012  |  Marketwire

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA -- (Marketwire) -- 02/23/12 -- Baja Mining Corp. (TSX: BAJ)(OTCQX: BAJFF) today announced that it has filed a complaint with the British Columbia Securities Commission regarding certain disclosure practices of Mount Kellett Master Fund II A LP and Mount Kellett Capital Management LP (together, 'Mount Kellett').


The complaint involves Mount Kellett's failure to file early warning and insider trading reports last year after it acquired more than 10% of Baja's shares. Baja believes Mount Kellett chose a less transparent form of disclosure as part of a stealth strategy to acquire control of Baja without paying a premium to all shareholders.


'The BC Securities Commission should take appropriate action in the event that it determines Mount Kellett contravened applicable securities laws by failing to comply with Canada's Early Warning System,' said Giles Baynham, Chairman. 'We are gravely concerned that Baja shareholders were disadvantaged by Mount Kellett's lack of full transparency while it was accumulating shares last year.'


Mount Kellett, after reaching 10%, was obligated under Canada's Early Warning System to file all of its trades and the prices paid for Baja shares. Mount Kellett was also obligated to distribute a news release after it reached 10% and should have issued follow-on news releases with each additional 2% acquired.


As previously disclosed, Mount Kellett has requisitioned a meeting of shareholders to change Baja's Board. Baja believes Mount Kellett's initiative is part of a creeping takeover plan. For a more complete explanation Baja urges shareholders to carefully read Baja's Management Information Circular and related materials, which were mailed to shareholders and posted to Baja's website and SEDAR.


Baja urges shareholders to vote AGAINST Mount Kellett's director removal resolution, and AGAINST Mount Kellett's Board expansion resolution. Baja urges shareholders to vote WITHHOLD for the two Mount Kellett nominees to the Board, Stephen Lehner (an employee of Mount Kellett) and Lorie Waisberg. Shareholders should vote only their GOLD proxy well in advance of the proxy voting deadline of March 30, 2012 at 10:00 a.m. (Vancouver Time).


The complete letter of complaint to the BC Securities Commission follows (except for copies of Mount Kellett's actual SEDAR filings, which are available at www.sedar.com under the Baja company profile).



British Columbia Securities Commission
701 West Georgia Street
P.O. Box 10142, Pacific Centre
Vancouver, B.C. V7Y 1L2


Attention: Lang Evans, Director, Enforcement Division


Dear Mr. Evans


We, Baja Mining Corp. ('Baja'), are writing to express our grave concern regarding apparent contraventions of British Columbia early warning and insider reporting requirements by Mount Kellett Master Fund II A LP and Mount Kellett Capital Management LP (together, 'Mount Kellett')(1).


We believe Mount Kellett committed the contraventions last year while acquiring an aggregate of 19.9% of Baja's issued and outstanding common shares (the 'Trades'). It is Baja's belief that there are sellers of its shares who might have acted differently had they known that Mount Kellett was accumulating shares and intended to seek control.


After acquiring a 10% ownership position in Baja, Mount Kellett did not file insider reports via the System for Electronic Disclosure by Insiders ('SEDI'), and did not provide other public disclosure of its acquisitions required under applicable Canadian securities laws(2), including:


- the distribution of a news release and filing on SEDAR of an early warning report on reaching the 10% ownership threshold; and


- the distribution of additional news releases and reports each time a further 2% of Baja's outstanding shares was acquired (together, the 'Early Warning System').


The protections afforded to other investors by insider reporting requirements and the Early Warning System are crucial in ensuring that all shareholders are on a level playing field, and in particular in ensuring that smaller shareholders have the information they need to make informed decisions about their investments.


(1) According to public filings, Mount Kellett Capital Management possesses the sole power to vote and the sole power to direct the disposition of securities of Baja held by Mount Kellett Master Fund II A LP.


(2) NI 62-103 The Early Warning System and Related Take-Over Bid and Insider Reporting Issues ('NI 62-103').


To ensure that this situation is not repeated, we ask that the BC Securities Commission investigate this matter and make such orders or provide such guidance as it feels appropriate, up to and including the imposition of sanctions against Mount Kellett.


Mount Kellett intended to control Baja but hid this from other shareholders


We believe that Mount Kellett, a self-described opportunistic investor and manager of US$6 billion, made improper use of the alternate monthly reporting exemption available to eligible institutional investors under NI 62-103 - an exemption to which Mount Kellett is not entitled. When it made the Trades, Mount Kellett had designs on Baja which differ from those of the eligible institutional investors making the kind of passive investments contemplated by Part 4 of NI 62-103.


In Baja's view, Mount Kellett's designs were to become a 'control person' (as the term is defined under Canadian law) in order to advance a creeping takeover of Baja without offering a premium to all shareholders. In support of Baja's position with regard to the creeping takeover, Baja has provided a summary timeline of events as an Appendix to this letter.


Mount Kellett concealed its intention to seek control from the public, but revealed it privately to Baja in May 2011, when it twice asked (May 9, 2011 and May 25, 2011) for a special exemption from Baja's shareholder rights plan so that it could acquire up to $125 million of Baja's shares. Based on the trading price of Baja's shares at the time, this would have been equivalent to more than 30% of Baja's issued capital. If Mount Kellett was not already a control person of Baja, this would have caused it to become one.


Baja's Board rejected both attempts by Mount Kellett to seek the exemption from the shareholder rights plan. Even so, having demonstrated its intent to take control, Mount Kellett should have been precluded from using the alternative monthly report system, which it used to avoid transparency regarding its accumulation. Mount Kellett should have begun filing insider reports and Early Warning System reports and news releases no later than May 9, 2011, having disclosed its intention to Baja on that date.


In fact, Baja now believes that Mount Kellett may have formed its intention to become a control person as early as the fall of 2010. At that time, Mount Kellett unsuccessfully attempted to negotiate a US$50 million private placement equity financing with Baja. The 'strings-attached' financing would have included special rights for Mount Kellett, including pre-emptive rights to participate in any future equity financings to maintain its percentage shareholding and a right of first refusal to provide future equity financing.


In the context of Mount Kellett's subsequent demands for special treatment, the offer of a 'strings-attached' financing with features not available to other shareholders was in fact the initial expression of Mount Kellett's intention to control Baja. Mount Kellett should have begun filing insider reports and Early Warning System news releases as soon as it achieved 10% ownership.


How Mount Kellett's disclosure avoided full transparency


In Canada, Mount Kellett disclosed its acquisitions of Baja shares in four SEDAR filings using the alternative monthly report system. This method of disclosure was deliberately chosen by Mount Kellett because it is significantly less transparent than disclosure of the acquisitions under the Early Warning System and by the filing of insider reports on SEDI.


Using the alternative monthly report system under NI 62-103, Mount Kellett made the following four SEDAR filings respecting the acquisitions by Mount Kellett:



--------------------------------------------------------------------
# Shares held % of Baja's total shares Filing Date
--------------------------------------------------------------------
1 55,111,600 16.4% May 6, 2011
--------------------------------------------------------------------
2 66,977,117 19.9% June 10, 2011
--------------------------------------------------------------------
3 67,461,117 19.9% December 9, 2011
--------------------------------------------------------------------
4 67,461,117 19.9% February 10, 2012
--------------------------------------------------------------------


Copies of these reports are enclosed with this letter.


Mount Kellett's less transparent disclosure had the effect of denying important and timely information to other Baja shareholders. For example, Mount Kellett's failure to file insider reports deprived other shareholders of knowledge of each trade, including the price Mount Kellett paid to acquire shares of Baja. And by failing to distribute news releases and file early warning reports, Mount Kellett minimized the ability of other Baja shareholders to note the accumulation or foresee that Mount Kellett could be positioning itself for an attempt to take a control position.


If Baja's selling shareholders had been properly informed within five days of each trade, they might have acted differently. Instead, Mount Kellett suppressed disclosure of its purchases until long after the Trades had been effected and any investor had an opportunity to react. And when it did disclose its position, the disclosure was incomplete because Mount Kellett failed to report each individual Trade and prices of such Trades.


Although Mount Kellett has never disclosed when it crossed the 10% threshold, it did disclose in a filing it made on April 8, 2011 that it had acquired 11.9% of Baja's shares. This disclosure is instructive because Mount Kellett did not make it in British Columbia, the primary jurisdiction for trading of Baja shares, or elsewhere in Canada. Instead, Mount Kellett provided this information by way of a filing only with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.


Investors in Canada, including those subject to the jurisdiction of the BC Securities Commission, had to wait another month to learn that Mount Kellett had become a substantial shareholder (except for those investors who happened to be monitoring SEC filings).


Is Mount Kellett an 'Eligible Institutional Investor'?


Mount Kellett claims to be exempt from the early warning requirements (as such term is defined in NI 62-103) and entitled to file reports of acquisitions under the alternative monthly reporting system because it is an 'eligible institutional investor'.


We believe Mount Kellett relies on sub-paragraph (d) of the definition of 'eligible institutional investor' in NI 62-103, which reads:


'an investment manager in relation to securities over which it exercises discretion to vote, acquire or dispose without the express consent of the beneficial owner, subject to applicable legal requirements, general investment policies, guidelines, objectives or restrictions.'


Properly construed, this definition does not include investors such as Mount Kellett - to the contrary, as we will discuss further below, investors such as Mount Kellett act in precisely the manner that motivates and necessitates the early warning system in the first place.


If sub-paragraph (d) of the definition were to apply to Mount Kellett, it would apply to any institutional investor. The features of the definition which are intended to distinguish 'eligible' institutional investors from all institutional investors would be ignored.


Those features are described in sub-paragraph (d) by the requirement that the investment manager's discretion be subject to 'applicable legal requirements, general investment policies, guidelines, objectives or restrictions'. In our view, this is a clear indication that the definition is meant to describe investment managers making passive investments on behalf of third party beneficial owners to exceed the 10% ownership threshold without triggering the early warning and insider filing requirements normally applicable in respect of such acquisitions. For acquirors meeting the requirements of the exemption, a less onerous form of alternative monthly report is permitted.


The other classes of eligible institutional investors identified in the other sub-paragraphs of the definition include financial institutions, pension funds and mutual funds - indicative of the type of passive investor for which the alternative monthly reporting system is available.


Mount Kellett is not such an investor. It is an aggressive self-described opportunist possessing non-public information about Baja and engaged in an ongoing campaign to secure a control position in Baja.


Summary


The facts outlined in this letter represent exactly the type of scenario for which the early warning requirements and insider reporting requirements were designed. When it made the Trades, Mount Kellett had designs on Baja which differ from those of an investment manager making passive investments and which should preclude Mount Kellett from using the alternative monthly reporting to avoid transparency regarding its trades. Canadian investors in Baja should have been advised by Mount Kellett about Mount Kellett's intentions and its Trades.


Instead, Mount Kellett hid behind a reporting exemption which should not be available to it to make acquisitions of Baja shares without public scrutiny, and the investing public was deprived of the ability to make decisions based on the information which the early warning reporting system and insider reporting system are intended to provide.


Baja is deeply concerned that Mount Kellett's conduct in acquiring Baja shares has deprived Baja shareholders of information and protection to which they were entitled. Baja believes the BC Securities Commission should provide such orders or such guidance as it feels appropriate, including the imposition of sanctions against Mount Kellett. Such action will send a message to any investors who might consider abusing the alternative monthly reporting system.


Thank you in advance for your consideration in this matter of utmost urgency. We would be happy to provide any additional information that you may require and discuss these issues further.


Yours Truly,


Baja Mining Corp.


'Giles Baynham'


Giles Baynham, Chairman


Appendix: Timeline of Events



--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dates Event Implication
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
September- Mount Kellett conducts The 'strings' indicate
November 2010 extensive due diligence and Mount Kellett was seeking
offers a 'strings-attached' control and wanted Baja to
private placement equity put Mount Kellett's
financing interest ahead of those of
other Baja shareholders.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unknown date Mount Kellett acquires 10% Based on Mount Kellett's
prior to of Baja's shares intention to seek control,
April 8, 2011 it should have issued a
news release and filed both
an initial report on SEDI
and an Early Warning System
report on SEDAR. It did
none of these things.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
April 8, 2011 Mount Kellett discloses in This US filing was not
a filing with the US matched with a similar
Securities and Exchange filing in Canada. As a
Commission that it has result investors within the
acquired 11.9% of Baja's jurisdictions of Canadian
shares regulators had to wait
another month to know Mount
Kellett had become a
substantial shareholder
(unless they happened to be
monitoring SEC filings).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
April 12, 2011 Mount Kellett declines Had Mount Kellett accepted
Baja's offer of a Board a Board seat, Mount Kellett
seat could no longer have
pretended that it did not
need to file insider
reports and disclose its
intentions in Canada. Given
subsequent demands for
Board representation, Baja
believes Mount Kellett's
April 2011 position was
intended to keep Baja's
Canadian shareholders in
the dark as long as
possible with regard to
Mount Kellett's creeping
takeover plan.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
May 6, 2011 Mount Kellett discloses by By using a filing that is
way of an alternative less transparent than the
monthly report on SEDAR filings required by the
that it owns 16.4% of Early Warning System and
Baja's shares. insider reporting rules,
Mount Kellett pursued a
creeping takeover strategy
to accumulate shares and
seek control.
--------------------------------------------------------
Mount Kellett privately The pressure for a Board
begins to press for a Board seat, combined with other
seat. factors noted in this
letter, further confirms
Mount Kellett's intention
to seek control.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
May 9, 2011 Mount Kellett's first Considering that 20%
private request for an ownership would have deemed
exemption from the Mount Kellett a control
Shareholder Rights Plan to person, the request clearly
buy more than 30% of Baja's shows Mount Kellett's
shares. intention to seek control
by way of a creeping
takeover without paying a
premium for control. If
--------------------------------------------- there was any doubt before,
May 25, 2011 Mount Kellett's second Mount Kellett's
private request for an ineligibility to use the
exemption from the alternative monthly
Shareholder Rights Plan to reporting system and to
buy more than 30% of Baja's avoid filing insider
shares. reports was now clear.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
June 10, 2011 Mount Kellett discloses by By continuing to make less
way of an alternative transparent filings than
monthly report on SEDAR the filings it should have
that it owns 19.9% of been making under the Early
Baja's shares. Warning System and in
--------------------------------------------- compliance with insider
December 9, 2011 Mount Kellett discloses by reporting requirements,
way of an alternative Mount Kellett continued its
monthly report on SEDAR creeping takeover stealth
that it has increased its strategy to accumulate
ownership measured in total shares and seek control.
shares and still owns 19.9%
of Baja's shares
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
December 16, Mount Kellett discloses by Mount Kellett initiates a
2011 way of a news release that proxy contest to advance
it has requisitioned a its creeping takeover,
meeting of Baja having failed to persuade
shareholders with the the Board to permit Mount
objective of placing two Kellett to control Baja
representatives, including without offering a premium
a Mount Kellett employee, to all shareholders.
on Baja's Board.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------


About Baja


Baja Mining Corp. (TSX: BAJ)(OTCQX: BAJFF) is a mine development company with a 70 percent interest in the Boleo copper-cobalt-zinc-manganese Project located near Santa Rosalia, Baja California Sur, Mexico. Baja is the project operator and a Korean syndicate of industrial companies holds the remaining 30 percent. Boleo is funded, currently under construction and targeted for copper commissioning in 2012, and copper production in early 2013. Boleo has 265 Mt of measured and indicated resources (including 85 Mt of proven and probable reserves) and 165 Mt of inferred resources. A March 2010 updated technical report to the 2007 definitive feasibility study, confirmed that Boleo could be developed economically at an after-tax IRR of 25.6 percent (100 percent equity), with a minimum scheduled mine life of 23 years (during which approximately 70 Mt of the noted proven and probable reserves will be exploited), a NPV of US$1.3 billion (8 percent discount rate), and an average life-of-mine cash cost of negative US$0.29/lb for copper, net of by-product credits. Metal Prices were based on SEC pricing guidelines (which at the time of the 2010 report were US$2.91/lb Cu, US$26.85/lb Co and US$1,175/tonne ZnSO4H2O). For more information, please visit www.bajamining.com.


On behalf of the Board of Directors of Baja Mining Corp.


John W. Greenslade, President & Chief Executive Officer


Forward-Looking Statements


This news release contains forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are statements that relate to future events or financial performance, including statements regarding potential actions of the BC Securities Commission, anticipated developments at the Company's projects and the projected performance and economics of the Boleo Project. In addition, estimates of mineral reserves and resources and NPV estimates may be forward-looking statements because they represent estimates of mineralization, costs, revenues and other factors that may be encountered in the future. Forward-looking statements speak only as of their date, are only predictions and are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, including without limitation those described in Baja's most recent annual information form filed under its profile at www.sedar.com and its most recent annual report filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission ('SEC') at www.sec.gov. All forward-looking statements in this news release are qualified by these cautionary statements. These risks, as well as risks that the Company cannot currently anticipate, could cause the Company's or its industry's actual results, levels of activity or performance to be materially different from any future results, levels of activities or performance expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. Although the Company believes that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements included in this press release are reasonable, the Company cannot guarantee future results, levels of activity or performance. Except as required by applicable law, the Company does not intend to update any of these forward-looking statements to conform them to actual results.


Cautionary Note Regarding References to Resources and Reserves


National Instrument 43 101 - Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects ('NI 43-101') is a rule developed by the Canadian Securities Administrators which establishes standards for all public disclosure an issuer makes of scientific and technical information concerning mineral projects. Unless otherwise indicated, all reserve and resource estimates contained in this press release have been prepared in accordance with NI 43-101 and the guidelines set out in the Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum (the 'CIM') Standards on Mineral Resource and Mineral Reserves (the 'CIM Standards').


United States shareholders are cautioned that the requirements and terminology of NI 43-101 and the CIM Standards differ significantly from the requirements and terminology of the SEC set forth in the SEC's Industry Guide 7 ('SEC Industry Guide 7'). Accordingly, the Company's disclosures regarding mineralization may not be comparable to similar information disclosed by companies subject to SEC Industry Guide 7. Without limiting the foregoing, while the terms 'mineral resources', 'inferred mineral resources', 'indicated mineral resources' and 'measured mineral resources' are recognized and required by NI 43-101 and the CIM Standards, they are not recognized by the SEC and are not permitted to be used in documents filed with the SEC by companies subject to SEC Industry Guide 7. Mineral resources which are not mineral reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability, and US investors are cautioned not to assume that all or any part of a mineral resource will ever be converted into reserves. Further, inferred resources have a great amount of uncertainty as to their existence and as to whether they can be mined legally or economically. It cannot be assumed that all or any part of the inferred resources will ever be upgraded to a higher resource category. Under Canadian rules, estimates of inferred mineral resources may not form the basis of a feasibility study or prefeasibility study, except in rare cases. The SEC normally only permits issuers to report mineralization that does not constitute SEC Industry Guide 7 compliant 'reserves' as in-place tonnage and grade without reference to unit amounts. In addition, the NI 43-101 and CIM Standards definition of a 'reserve' differs from the definition in SEC Industry Guide 7. In SEC Industry Guide 7, a mineral reserve is defined as a part of a mineral deposit which could be economically and legally extracted or produced at the time the mineral reserve determination is made, and a 'final' or 'bankable' feasibility study is required to report reserves, the three-year historical price is used in any reserve or cash flow analysis of designated reserves and the primary environmental analysis or report must be filed with the appropriate governmental authority.

Contacts:

Shareholders:

Laurel Hill Advisory Group

Toll-free 1-877-304-0211

Collect: 416-304-0211
assistance@laurelhill.com


Media:

Longview Communications

Alan Bayless

604-694-6035
abayless@longviewcomms.ca


Joel Shaffer

416-649-8006
jshaffer@longviewcomms.ca



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