Cape Times

Amsa sells its stake in Macsteel for R3bn

Steel producer’s shares soar as the sale of the 50 percent stake in shipping and trading business is finalised

- DINEO FAKU dineo.faku@inl.co.za

SUB-SAHARAN Africa’s biggest steel producer ArcelorMit­tal South Africa (Amsa) soared more than 10 percent on the JSE yesterday on news that the group’s R3 billion sale of the 50 percent stake in shipping and trading business Macsteel Internatio­nal Holdings had been finalised.

Amsa, which in August posted the first interim profit in six years, said the proceeds from the sale would assist in strengthen­ing its balance sheet significan­tly.

The group said the sale marked a milestone for achieving its objectives.

“The funds will primarily be used to strengthen the balance sheet and fund the working capital requiremen­ts and will support the company in achieving its goal to be a sustainabl­e and profitable company,” Amsa said.

Macsteel is 50 percent owned by Machold and 50 percent held by MSSA Investment­s, a wholly owned Amsa subsidiary. The stock traded 9.95 percent higher to change hands at R4.31 a share at 12.07pm.

An analyst who spoke on condition of anonymity said the share had been on the rise since the sale was first mooted in May.

“Today’s announceme­nt is a catalyst for the jump. There is more to the strong share price than the announceme­nt,” he said, adding that there had been a reprieve from the US.

The transactio­n comes as South Africa last month said that the some local steel and aluminium producers had been granted exemptions from tariffs on exports to the US. US President Donald Trump earlier this year moved to introduce a 25 percent tariff for steel imports and 10 percent tariff for aluminium imports.

Despite Amsa losing 35.4 percent in the year to date, the stock had risen 8 percent on news of the exemptions. It also rose 24 percent on May 28, when the company first announced the plans to dispose of its 50 percent stake in Macsteel Internatio­nal Holdings.

The group said it was selling Macsteel as it was no longer considered a core asset. It said while most of the steel for the joint venture was sourced from Amsa in the early days, the South African steel maker currently supplied less than 20 percent of the total tonnage traded and less than 2 percent of volumes shipped by joint venture.

Amsa, which is valued at R5bn, also told shareholde­rs yesterday that the remaining conditions precedent had now been fulfilled.

These included Amsa and Macsteel Internatio­nal Holdings entering into a new, four-year marketing agreement. The companies also had to obtain government and regulatory approvals.

Amsa previously hinted that it was planning to sell non-core assets after battling pressure on its balance sheet after haemorrhag­ing billions of rand amid cheap Chinese steel imports and a lack of big domestic infrastruc­ture spend. The government also moved to introduce tariffs on certain steel imports in a bid to protect the local industry.

In August the company said that strong global demand, a 17 percent jump in internatio­nal steel prices and lower costs helped the group to report interim headline earnings of R54m, compared to the headline loss of R1.6bn in the first half of 2017.

Amsa shares closed 10.20 percent higher on the JSE yesterday at R4.32.

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 ?? | Supplied ?? ARCELOR Mittal’s foundry. Proceeds from the Macsteel sale will assist in strengthen­ing Amsa’s balance sheet significan­tly.
| Supplied ARCELOR Mittal’s foundry. Proceeds from the Macsteel sale will assist in strengthen­ing Amsa’s balance sheet significan­tly.

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