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New | World’s biggest privately owned coal company Peabody files for bankruptcy as slowdown in China and falling prices bite

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Traders work at the post where Peabody Energy is traded on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange after the world’s largest privately owned coal producer iled for US bankruptcy protection on Wednesday in the wake of a sharp fall in coal prices that left it unable to service a recent debt-fuelled expansion. Photo: Reuters

Leading global coal producer Peabody Energy Corp filed for US bankruptcy protection on Wednesday after a sharp drop in coal prices left it unable to service debt of US$10.1 billion, much of it incurred for an expansion into Australia.

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The Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing from Peabody, the world’s biggest private-sector coal producer, ranks among the largest in the commodities sector since energy and metal prices began to fall in mid-2014 as once fast-growing markets including China and Brazil started to slow.

Unlike most large corporate bankruptcies, Peabody’s filing did not sketch out a plan for cutting debt, although it said it expected its mines to continue to operate as usual.

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Peabody estimated its assets at $11.0 billion and liabilities at $10.1 billion as of the end of 2015, according to court documents.

The St. Louis-based company said its planned sale of mines in New Mexico and Colorado had fallen through and that its Australian operations were excluded from the bankruptcy filing.

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