Greater than 97 percent of Goldcorp shareholders voted for the merger at a special meeting in Vancouver, the miner said Thursday in a statement.
The deal would see Colorado-based Newmont pay 0.3280 of its shares for each Goldcorp share, plus two cents.
The Goldcorp ballot required at least two-thirds of shareholders who voted to approve the deal.
The result was expected partly because two shareholder advisory groups, Glass, Lewis & Co. and Institutional Shareholder Services Inc., had recommended investors vote in favor of the deal.
Newmont shareholders are scheduled to vote on the deal April 11. The promise of an 88-cent special dividend, if the deal proceeds, has already won over some of its largest investors.
Newmont has said the merger with Goldcorp will create more than $4.4 billion in value and give the company sustainable annual production of 6 million to 7 million ounces.
Goldcorp pared losses and rose 0.3 percent to C$15.37 at 12:43 p.m. in Toronto, while Newmont increased 0.1 percent in New York.
If the transaction goes through, the combined company will control mines in the Americas, Australia and Ghana. The tie-up would dwarf Barrick Gold Corp.’s recent $5.4 billion acquisition of Randgold Resources Ltd., and may exceed Barrick’s 2006 purchase of Placer Dome Inc. as the gold-industry’s biggest takeover, which had a final value of about $9.6 billion. Read Full Story

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