Business Day

Petra weighs future of assets

- Lisa Steyn Mining & Energy Writer steynl@businessli­ve.co.za

Despite a watershed year in which Petra Diamonds swung strongly back to profit, the diamond miner has discontinu­ed operations at its Williamson mine in Tanzania, while the fate of its Koffiefont­ein operation in the Free State hangs in the balance amid a continued asset review.

Despite a watershed year in which Petra Diamonds swung strongly back to profit, the diamond miner has discontinu­ed operations at its Williamson mine in Tanzania, while the fate of its Koffiefont­ein operation in the Free State now also hangs in the balance amid a continued asset review.

The Jersey-headquarte­red company, listed on the London Stock Exchange, owns three diamond mines in SA and one in Tanzania. On Tuesday, it reported a 65% surge in revenue to $402.3m (R5.8bn) for the year ended June 2021, and net profit of $196.6m, from a $223m loss in the previous year .

Petra’s completion of major capital restructur­ing coupled with strong sales and improved market prices saw it reduce net debt by about two-thirds, from $693.2m in June 2020 to $228.2m in June 2021.

Notably, the sales from exceptiona­l stones made their highest contributi­on to revenues yet, jumping to $62m, up from $14.9m in 2020, thanks to a number of exceptiona­l blue and white diamonds produced from Petra’s Cullinan mine.

Among these record recoveries was a 39.34-carat blue diamond, which was sold for $40m and is the most valuable single diamond sold by Petra. At $1m a carat, Petra said this was thought to be the highest per carat price for a rough diamond achieved.

Cullinan delivered a record performanc­e, bringing in $250m in revenue. Petra also highlighte­d the successful conclusion of a three-year wage agreement with the National Union of Mineworker­s.

“We enter FY 2022 [financial year 2022] with some momentum from a considerab­ly strengthen­ed balance sheet, ongoing optimisati­on of our asset base and a positive outlook for the diamond market,” said Petra Diamonds CEO Richard Duffy.

The company announced that the board has decided to review its strategic options at Williamson in Tanzania, and the asset has therefore been classified as an asset held for sale and has been reflected as a discontinu­ed operation in financial results.

The mine is operated by Williamson Diamonds, which is 25% owned by the government of Tanzania and 75% owned by Petra. The mine was on care and maintenanc­e for financial year 2021 because of a dip in the diamond market.

The firm is now in talks with the Tanzanian government for an agreement that will add stability to the operation but is not a prerequisi­te to the restart of the mine, which Petra Diamonds said it is now mobilising to do.

Group production for the year was negatively affected by production challenges at the Finsch mine in the Northern Cape and Koffiefont­ein in the Free State, Duffy said. The company

THE FIRM IS IN TALKS WITH THE TANZANIAN GOVERNMENT FOR AN AGREEMENT THAT WILL ADD STABILITY TO THE OPERATION

was confident that re-engineerin­g projects under way will lead to improved production and margins at both operations during the 2022 financial year.

Having first started mining 140 years ago, Koffiefont­ein is a smaller and older mine that has brought high value production for the group but now only has a few years of life left and is incurring losses.

The re-engineerin­g project at Koffiefont­ein would determine the asset’s future, Duffy said.

“We are not in the business of running assets that don’t generate value,” he said.

“This is really a step to finalise a position on Koffiefont­ein — that’s why we are going through the re-engineerin­g exercise to finally determine what value we think we can get from the assets.”

In terms of outlook, Duffy said global diamond inventorie­s have continued to come down and market prices have improved. “The market is generally in a good place and we would hope to see that support continue going forward, even though we may not see the same rate of increase that we saw in recent months,” he said.

 ?? /Reuters/File ?? Time to shine: Sales from exceptiona­l stones made a significan­t contributi­on to Petra’s revenues, with a 39.34-carat blue diamond fetching $40m.
/Reuters/File Time to shine: Sales from exceptiona­l stones made a significan­t contributi­on to Petra’s revenues, with a 39.34-carat blue diamond fetching $40m.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa