Commodities giant Glencore said on Thursday that it was in the process of completing a plan to reduce its towering debt and aimed to resume dividend payments next year. Glencore, which has been scrambling for more than a year to cut back its debt-load after it peaked at around $30 billion, said on Thursday its plan to reduce that burden was "nearing completion".
"Last year we announced a programme of measures to reduce our debt and structurally increase the flexibility and strength of our balance sheet," Glencore chief Ivan Glasenberg said in the statement.
The debt reduction plan, launched in September 2015, included scrapping its dividend, suspending production at a number of mines, and selling off assets.
Glencore said it was "on track" to see its net debt shrink to $16.5-$17.5 billion by the end of 2016, down from nearly $26 billion at the end of 2015.
It also said it had divested $6.3 billion in assets, compared to the $1.2 billion it had expected to divest.


















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