Whether you’re in Istanbul’s Kapalı Çarşı haggling over those Adidas knock-offs, or on Facebook Marketplace getting a good deal on those jousting sticks, cash is king.
So when Hong Kong’s Zijin Mining Group moved yesterday to buy Canada-registered Allied Gold for $4B in cash, it seemed straightforward, considering…
- a) bullion just surged past $5,000 an ounce
- b) Allied has mines in Mali, the Ivory Coast, plus a fourth opening in Ethiopia, and
- c) in a world as spooked as ours, gold seems destined to always find new buyers.
But there are still more layers here than a mille-feuille pastry, so shall we dig in?
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- The buyer
Founded in the 80s by geologist-turned-tycoon Chen Jinghe, Zijin is now the world’s third-largest miner, clearing $100B in market cap in September (it’s now above $140B!).
And with only Anglo-Australian giants BHP and Rio Tinto ahead, Zijin wants more — it’s been on a buying spree these three years, snagging assets from Ghana to the Congo, with this Allied deal now bringing a neat new addition: immediate output from Mali and Ivory Coast, plus imminent growth via Ethiopia’s first industrial-scale gold mine at Kurmuk.
- The product
Zijin has always been a player in gold, but it’s now doubling down: first, record prices mean it’s flush with cash to buy rather than develop new streams; second, gold’s safe-haven status helps hedge against more volatility elsewhere in its portfolio (eg zinc, lithium); and third, Zijin’s gold-rush also aligns with Beijing’s race not just for gold as a reserve asset, but as an industrial input in sectors like electronics.
- The location
Africa makes sense, too: first, it’s home to many of the world’s highest-grade remaining deposits; second, Western rivals often face higher regulatory hurdles at home and more hostile junta regulators locally; and third, China’s “going out” strategy means Zijin and others can often promise integrated infrastructure (road, rail, power), not just the mine.
- The seller
Meanwhile, rattled Western capitals are now more trigger-happy with the ‘national security card‘ to block a transaction, and Canada is no exception: it’s significantly tightened its investment oversight lately, particularly if there’s a China link.
But while Canadian regulators have blocked similar mining bids before, this Zijin-Allied deal enjoys one crucial difference: these mines are outside Canada, rather than (say) in strategically sensitive regions like the Arctic.
- The timing
The deal stems from Allied’s ongoing strategic review since 2024, but the timing is now helpful for both Canada and China: with a more confrontational US over the border, Canada is now openly hustling to diversify its partnerships. The result is not just that Mark Carney speech at Davos, but also the spot he visited en route (China).
Now, the extreme degree of US-Canada economic integration arguably makes this move like trying to diversify away from the sun by pivoting your solar panels towards Alpha-Centauri, but this visit yielded some quick outcomes: China dropped its levies on Canadian canola from 85% to 15%, while Canada cut its EV tariffs back from 100% to 6.1%.
Now waving through this mining deal? It’s another quick signal: we’re open for business.
So yes, dear Intriguer. This deal is about cash, it’s about jousting sticks, and it’s about gold. But it’s also about much, much more.
Intrigue’s Take
Western players have long dominated the mining sector, but China has advantages that’ll further erode that gap over time, with several on display in this Zijin-Allied deal: think lower cost of capital, more state backing, and more favourable offtake agreements.
And that offtake point is key: even where the West dominates the digging, China dominates the processing, which means it’s still buying (say) three quarters of the world’s iron ore; two thirds of its copper, bauxite, and nickel; half its coal; and a third of its gold.
So even Western-owned miners are arguably just cogs in China’s broader industrial machine, an arrangement which keeps teaching us lessons in leverage every other day.
That’s why the US government is now on its most aggressive shopping spree in three quarters of a century, quietly buying up key stakes to break China’s leverage, whether it’s USA Rare Earth this month, Korea Zinc last month, ReElement in November, Trilogy Metals in October, or beyond.
Sound even smarter:
- Zijin’s largest shareholder (~24%) is a China state-owned fund, with the rest held by public and institutional investors like US giants BlackRock and Vanguard.
- Founder Chen Jinghe formally retired on 1 January, with some investors worried by the lack of an immediate successor.

