Business Day

Argent expects surge in earnings

- Siseko Njobeni Industrial Writer njobenis@businessli­ve.co.za

Argent Industrial, the steel products manufactur­er, says that it expects earnings to more than double due to its recent restructur­ing programme and a strong performanc­e by its internatio­nal business.

Steel products manufactur­er Argent Industrial says it expects earnings to more than double due to its recent restructur­ing and a strong performanc­e by its internatio­nal business.

The company closed down some local manufactur­ing operations, which had come under pressure because of a weak South African economy, leaving the group to increasing­ly rely on its UK and US units.

On Thursday, the group said it expected earnings to improve as much as 125% in the six months ended September 30. Argent said it expected headline earnings per share for the first six months of the financial year to be between 36.9% and 56.9% at 43.13c and 49.43c per share, compared to the 31.49% in the correspond­ing period in 2017.

The group, which makes and sells a wide range of branded products, including for railways, doors and gates, said its earnings per share were likely to be between 105% and 125% higher at 16.5c and 74.9c per share, compared to the loss of 292.3c in 2017. In response to the unfavourab­le local market conditions in the 2018 financial year, Argent underwent restructur­ing that entailed closing or impairing a number of local businesses.

THE STEEL PRODUCTS MAKER UNDERWENT RESTRUCTUR­ING THAT ENTAILED CLOSING OR IMPAIRING A NUMBER OF LOCAL BUSINESSES

The group’s write-downs amounted to R274.8m. Manufactur­ing is the biggest activity of the company, which operates factories in SA, the UK and US.

CEO Treve Hendry said in June that the restructur­ing and expected returns on the group’s overseas operations would hold the group in good stead in the current financial year (2019).

Argent will release results for the six months ended September 30 on November 15.

The interim financials will show the extent to which the recent imposition of steel and aluminium tariffs by the US on South African foundries has affected it.

Trade & industry minister Rob Davies said on Wednesday that the US tariffs would affect local companies.

“We made continuous representa­tions on that issue and so far we have not got any joy out of this. So as this carries on, this will impact increasing­ly on the performanc­e of global trade,” he said on the sidelines of the inaugural roundtable on the SA’s black industrial­ist programme in Pretoria.

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