Business Day

Anglo preparing sweeping cost cuts, say sources

• Miner may confirm plans on Friday, including shelving ambitions to boost output at Mogalakwen­a

- Felix Njini and Clara Denina

Anglo American is preparing to freeze spending on growth and widen job cuts in SA, going far beyond its initial savings target and paving the way to mothballin­g some higher-cost platinum mines, say informed sources.

Anglo’s sweeping spending cuts could be announced as soon as Friday, when the miner updates investors on its threeyear outlook, five sources said.

The sources said measures include shelving an ambitious plan to boost output at Anglo American Platinum’s key Mogalakwen­a mine and, if metal prices remain depressed, placing on care and maintenanc­e some shafts at the Amandelbul­t complex in the longer term, which had been initially targeted for mechanisat­ion and output expansion.

A concentrat­or plant at Amandelbul­t could also be placed on care and maintenanc­e, said one of the sources.

The moves are likely to result in further job cuts at the operations and lower output guidance, they said.

The miner initially targeted saving $500m by cutting corporate jobs and some costs at head offices in Johannesbu­rg, London and other locations.

Scaling down on spending could save an additional $1bn by the end of 2024, with most expected from its platinum group metal (PGM) operations, one of the sources said, as the company becomes the latest to feel the impact of the price rout ripping through the world’s top platinum producer, SA.

Anglo American declined to comment.

SA’s platinum mining output has been declining gradually over the past decades as investors baulk at investing in new mines amid threats to future demand from a rapidly growing battery electric vehicle (EV) sector.

Platinum, palladium and rhodium are used in devices that curb exhaust emissions from diesel and petrol engines.

A rapid and precipitou­s plunge in the prices of palladium and rhodium has already forced other SA producers, including Sibanye-Stillwater and Impala Platinum (Implats), to swiftly move to cut jobs in a bid to preserve margins.

Anglo is also expected to cut

THE MOVES ARE LIKELY TO RESULT IN FURTHER JOB CUTS AT THE OPERATIONS AND LOWER OUTPUT GUIDANCE

jobs and costs at its other SA unit, Kumba Iron Ore, where stockpiles grew to 9-million tonnes by September on worsening rail bottleneck­s.

Anglo Platinum is expected by a group of 11 analysts to account for 12% of the group’s net earnings at $1.3bn this year, which would be down from 30%, or $4.4bn, in 2022.

The plans come as Anglo CEO Duncan Wanblad seeks to develop a $9bn Woodsmith fertiliser project in Britain, on which the company announced a $1.7bn writedown in February.

“Higher-cost assets have been under pressure for some time now, particular­ly at older, labour-intensive mines,” said BofA Securities analysts.

“As the industry transition­s to newer, mechanised mines, older, higher-cost mines will be rationalis­ed,” they said.

Palladium prices have plunged to a five-year low, while rhodium, which soared to record highs of almost $30,000 an ounce in 2021, has fallen to about $4,400/oz. Platinum prices have fallen 16% in 2023.

The sector’s cost-cutting measures, also taken by junior platinum miners, come as Africa’s most industrial­ised economy grew only 0.3% in the first nine months of this year.

Platinum mines earned the country about R275bn in export receipts in 2022, according to Minerals Council SA data. The mines, some of which are among the world’s deepest, employ about 175,000 workers.

Some of those jobs are now evaporatin­g.

Sibanye, the biggest mining employer in SA, in October said it plans to cut about 4,000 jobs and close some shafts.

Rival Implats has a voluntary job cut process up to the end of the year, a spokespers­on said.

“If the numbers are low then we may need to do more capital rationalis­ation. More cost savings could include deeper labour initiative­s such as consulting with the unions [on section 189 process] or extending the voluntary separation process,” the spokespers­on said.

The sector’s woes may get even worse as penetratio­n of EVs increases in coming years.

“There will be significan­t demand destructio­n for PGMs, especially palladium and rhodium, though limited for platinum, starting 2028 due to battery electric vehicle penetratio­n, and as PGM demand for autocataly­sts decline,” said Citigroup analysts.

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