Impala Platinum To Raise Cash to Repair Finances
03 Septiembre 2015 - 6:00AM
Noticias Dow Jones
JOHANNESBURG—Impala Platinum Holdings Ltd. is to raise 4 billion
South African rand ($297.4 million) through a stock sale to bolster
its finances, battered by tumbling metal prices and the costs of
ramping up South African output which contributed to a hefty annual
loss.
The world's second-largest producer of platinum said on Thursday
that the capital increase is fully underwritten by Swiss bank UBS
and will allow the Rustenburg mine, hit hard by last year's
five-month platinum-sector strike, to improve output and
profitability.
Implats, along with other South African platinum miners, is
still struggling to recover from the worker strike, which hit
production and profits at a time when prices for the precious metal
were already low. In February, the company began cost-cutting and
restructuring in an attempt to improve profit margins and conserve
cash. Lonmin PLC, the world's No. 3 platinum producer, said in July
that it would cut 6,000 workers, or 17% of its workforce, over the
next two years.
Even large diversified mining groups are embarking on drastic
measure to rein in costs as raw material prices have tumbled. Anglo
American PLC, whose main commodities include platinum, copper and
iron ore, has said it would slash 53,000 jobs over several years, a
35% reduction of its current workforce. The group's
Johannesburg-listed Anglo American Platinum Ltd. unit, the world's
top platinum producer, said in July that it still wants to sell or
spin off its older Rustenburg and Union mines, which analysts say
are burning through cash.
Implats may have judged its fundraising well. "The timing of it
is very good," said SBG Securities platinum analyst Setendra
Naidoo. The funds will help the company complete two shafts at the
Rustenburg mine by 2020, Mr. Naidoo said.
Platinum miners say they expect the challenging price
environment to continue, with further downside still possible for
platinum prices, given industrial and investment demand are both
relatively flat.
Implats said it would have to tighten its belt further.
"We've now had to go back into our plans and look at further
cuts," said Chief Executive Terence Goodlace. Global prices for
platinum, which is used mainly to make car exhaust filters and
jewelry, have fallen 28% over the last 12 months, recently trading
just over $1,000 an ounce.
Implats shares are down 54% over the same period of time. Shares
on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange tumbled in early trading
Thursday but have since trimmed those loses, recently down 3.5% at
43.04 rand.
"Implats remains committed to returning excess cash flow to
shareholders going forward," the company said. Implats hasn't
declared a dividend since fiscal 2013.
The company reported a loss of 3.66 billion rand in the year to
June 30, a turnaround from a profit of 8 million rand the previous
year, in line with expectations. Revenue for the fiscal year rose
12% to 32.48 billion rand.
Implats said its performance was "severely impacted" by the
revving up of the Rustenburg mine, after the county's longest-ever
strike ended in June 2014, as well as safety-related work
stoppages, and power shortages. South Africa's economy is currently
blighted by frequent black outs, with capacity-constrained
state-owned utility Eskom struggling to supply the country with
enough electricity from its aging infrastructure.
The company's Zimbabwe operations were hit by the precautionary
closure of a mine there after a partial collapse of underground
tunnels in August 2014.
Implats' mine-to-market platinum output was up 16% from the
previous year as production began to recover from the industry
strike in 2014. Unit costs rose 14%.
A weaker rand, which has recently been plumbing all-time lows
against the U.S. dollar, helped cushion those cost increases in
dollar terms. The cost to produce an ounce of platinum rose only
3.9% to $1,947, given the rand was an average of 10% weaker over
the fiscal year compared with the previous year.
"The rand's been a bit of a safety valve and it probably will
continue to be that," said Daniel Sacks, portfolio manager of
Investec Asset Management's 353.4 million rand commodity fund in
Cape Town.
Still, the average price Implats received for its platinum fell
13% in dollar terms to $1,241 an ounce.
Write to Alexandra Wexler at alexandra.wexler@wsj.com
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 03, 2015 06:45 ET (10:45 GMT)
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