* Other miners also buoyed by commodity rebound
* Trading division profits from market volatility
* Additional cash distribution and buyback promised
(Adds detail, adds graphics)
By Clara Denina and Zandi Shabalala
LONDON, Aug 5 (Reuters) - Glencore will return $2.8
billion to shareholders in 2021 after soaring commodity prices
helped the mining and trading company to a record performance
for the first six months of the year, it said on Thursday.
The London-listed company's first-half adjusted earnings
before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA)
rose 79% to a record $8.7 billion, compared with $4.8 billion a
year earlier, beating the $8.4 billion expected by analysts
polled by Refinitiv.
Glencore joins rivals Rio Tinto and Anglo American
in declaring bonanza payouts after record half-year
profits powered by higher commodity prices.
"Following COVID-19's severe global impacts in early 2020,
the subsequent economic recovery has seen prices of most of our
commodities surging to multi-year highs amid accelerating demand
and lingering supply constraints," said Glencore CEO Gary Nagle,
who took the helm of the company in July.
Having reinstated its dividend in February after a
pandemic-driven halt and a loss in the first half of 2020,
Glencore announced an additional cash distribution of $0.04
cents per share, or $530 million to be paid in September, and a
share buyback of $650 million.
The company in February recommended a total payout of $1.6
billion.
"Although this is less than our $2 billion expectation... we
think the market will take this positively and the dividend
itself is ahead of consensus," said analysts at RBC Capital
Markets.
Prices of metals, including copper, cobalt and nickel, have
surged this year as demand rebounded from a COVID-19 slowdown.
The higher prices allowed Glencore to cut debt to $10.6
billion from $15.8 billion at the end of 2020. This was within
its target range of $10-$16 billion, which the miner said it
would need to reach before increasing dividends.
Glencore's trading or marketing division cashed in on
volatility in the market and recorded a EBIT of $1.8 billion in
the period. The division is expected to hit the top end of a
previous guidance of $2.2-$3.2 billion per annum.
(Reporting by Clara Denina and Zandi Shabalala
Editing by David Goodman and Barbara Lewis)