Thursday, March 7, 2013

Severstal suspends foreign projects as its profit drops threefold

One of the world’s leading metal companies, Russia's Severstal is suspending foreign projects in India and Trinidad and Tobago, after failing to reach agreement with its partners abroad.

A drop in profits, and weak global demand and prices also altered Severstal’s investment plans.

Severstal's main shareholder, Aleksey Mordashov speaking at a conference on Tuesday said his company is suspending its foreign projects in India and Trinidad and Tobago cutting $3 billion in investment.

According to Mordashov, the indian project stumbled when the Indian partners refused to give control of the project over to the Russian company. It was initially planned that Severstal and Indian NMDC will invest $5 billion to build a plant with a capacity to produce three million tons annually. Work on the project is currently suspended.

The Trinidad and Tobago project is still a big question as Severstal is waiting for the country’s authorities. The project was announced in January 2012. According to the plan Severstal was to invest $600 milion and build an iron plant with a capacity of 1.5 million tons per year.

Russia's second biggest steel producer published results on Tuesday showing a loss of $150 million in the fourth quarter of 2012 caused by weak demand and falling prices.

At the end of 2012 revenue dropped by 10.8 percent compared to 2011 to $14.1 billion. Net profit fell almost threefold year-on year to $762 million.

The company expects the unstable global economic backdrop to have a negative impact on steel prices in 2013, Gazeta.ru reports. In order to go back to the target level of debt-to-EBITDA ratio of 1.5, Severstal has slashed investment in 2013 to $1.3 billion from the previously planned $1.7 billion.

China and Europe's debt crisis also contributed to the decline in the steelmakers’ business, as it has hit construction and industrial production.

“The key negative data comes from the last quarter. Since January the company restored the production volume, however further growth can be negatively affected by the risks from China,” BKS analyst Oleg Petropavlovsky is quoted by Gazeta.ru as saying. “If the Chinese government continues to take measures to reduce real estate demand, it will have a negative impact on the amounts of consumption and the prices of steel.”

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