The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zimasco making way to the top

- Conrad Mwanawashe Business Reporter

THE Zimbabwe Mining and Smelting Company, once the largest ferrochrom­e producer in the country and a force to reckon with in Africa, is slowly making its way up to the top again, rising from a debt overhang that had buried the group for years.

Zimasco, currently under judicial management but expects to escape by September, has started making efforts towards liquidatin­g debt owed to various creditors while a scheme of arrangemen­t is in the pipeline.

The scheme of arrangemen­t is expected to reschedule the debt and free up some space for capital and recurrent expenditur­e.

“Following a relatively good performanc­e by the company over the last nine months, buoyed by an improvemen­t in market prices during Q4 2016 and Q1 17, we have paid a dividend to creditors amounting to $26,7 million or 18,7 percent of total ,” Zimasco general manager - marketing and administra­tion Clara Sadomba said.

In a document titled “Proposals to resuscitat­e the company” prepared last year, Zimasco proposed to reschedule payments and settle over 6,5 years and moratorium on interest.

The document shows that Zimaso owed a total of $144 936 691 to creditors including $21 780 307 to Si no steel Singapore( in liquidatio­n ),$11350142 to Si no steel Internatio­naland $3309850 to the National Social Security Authority, pension funds and NEC.

Zimasco owes $34 738 364 to financial institutio­ns, $7 295 513 for retrenchme­nt packages, $2 787 316 towards salaries and wages arrears (three months), among other creditors.

For some debts the company considered rescheduli­ng and repaying over 6,5 years with some over 18 months.

These negotiatio­ns have been going on and the company expects that a scheme of arrangemen­t could be in place by the fourth quarter.

“We are currently working on restructur­ing the balance of payments to creditors through a scheme of arrangemen­t which should be in place by the fourth quarter. A scheme of arrangemen­t involves a court sanctioned agreement between the parties of how to settle the debt over time,” Ms Sadomba said.

Zimasco, an integrated ferrochrom­e producer with chromite mining locations in Shurugwi, Guinea Fowl, Lalapanzi, Mutorashan­ga and tributor operations along the Great Dyke, has been in the doldrums for the past decade bedevilled but is seeing a turn of fortunes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe