The miner, which focuses on diamonds, platinum and copper, also said it would keep coal and nickel assets it had planned to sell after cutting costs and rejecting bids as too low.

Anglo was among the miners hardest hit by a slump in commodity prices in 2015, and a big gainer from a recovery in 2016 when it was the top performer in Britain's benchmark FTSE 100 index <.FTSE>.

In the depths of the downturn, Anglo said it would reduce its assets to 16 core commodities. Now it says the aim is to shrink from the roughly 40 assets it still has to around 30.

"We don't need to sell assets to address the balance sheet because it's done," CEO Mark Cutifani told reporters.

"If any assets go from here, it will be on the basis of cleaning up as we continue to improve the quality of the overall portfolio and ensuring we're robust."

Anglo said 2016 earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) rose 25 percent to $6.1 billion (£5 billion), while net debt fell 34 percent to $8.5 billion, well within a $10 billion limit set for 2016.

The goal for this year is to cut debt to $7 billion, to get an investment grade credit rating and to restore dividend payments, Cutifani said.

Analysts said the results beat expectations, but Anglo's shares had slipped 1.5 percent by 1415 GMT, more than the overall mining sector <.FTNMX1770>, which was down 0.4 percent.

Rival BHP Billiton (>> BHP Billiton Limited) (>> BHP Billiton plc) earlier on Tuesday reported an almost eight-fold increase in underlying first-half net profit and a bigger-than-expected dividend.

"The extent of deleveraging should give confidence in Anglo's renewed financial strength," Bernstein analysts said in a note, adding the decision to hold on to high margin coking coal and nickel assets was positive. They reiterated an "outperform" rating on the stock.

SHIFT IN MOOD

In December 2015, Anglo unveiled plans to offload three-fifths of its assets and focus on diamonds, platinum and copper.

Among the assets on offer were coal mines, which failed to attract high enough offers, Cutifani said. He added Anglo had cut unit costs by 7 percent at its Australian coal mines and the company could fruitfully keep operating them.

"There's more value we can extract and at the moment, no one's willing to pay the price, so we'll run them," he said.

Asked about Anglo's Australian coal assets, BHP Billiton CEO Andrew Mackenzie said they were high quality, but he was only willing to pay the right price.

"We want them when we can get them for a price that adds (shareholder) value," he told reporters.

Australian Newcastle thermal coal prices soared last year, more than doubling at their peak, ending the year 80 percent higher.

Cutifani was asked about a possible spin-off of Anglo's South African operations after the group's biggest shareholder, state-owned Public Investment Corp, proposed a separate locally-focused company be created and run by South Africans.

"We would be open to looking at a different structure in South Africa as long as I could demonstrate to all shareholders that it was something in their best interests," he said.

Analysts have said shareholders in the London-listed shares might be at a disadvantage to their South African counterparts under a spin-off.

(Additional reporting by Sanjeeban Sarkar in Bengaluru; Editing by Jason Neely and Mark Potter)

By Barbara Lewis and Eric Onstad

Stocks treated in this article : BHP Billiton plc, Anglo American plc, BHP Billiton Limited