The Mercury

Evraz opts for business rescue

Slump in demand for steel depletes firm’s cash reserves

- Yuliya Fedorinova and Andre Janse van Vuuren

EVRAZ Highveld Steel and Vanadium plans to apply for bankruptcy protection as a slump in demand for the metal left it with insufficie­nt funds.

Evraz’s board had filed a resolution to begin business rescue proceeding­s with the companies regulator, the unit said in a statement yesterday. Highveld had appointed business rescue officials, it said.

Evraz, which is partly controlled by billionair­e Roman Abramovich, bought a quarter of Highveld from Anglo American in 2006. It raised the stake to 85 percent the following year, paying more than a combined $678 million (R8 billion at yesterday’s rate) for the transactio­ns.

Moscow-based Evraz sought to sell the business in 2013, but failed to find a buyer as metals prices sank. The unit was hit by “weakened global steel and vanadium markets and a severe reduction of domestic steel demand”, Highveld said yesterday. Vanadium and steel fell more than 20 percent in the past year.

Protection from creditors would afford Highveld a way to consider whether it should continue implementi­ng a turnaround plan and successful­ly re-establish itself, the producer said.

Highveld produced 642 405 tons of steel in 2013, it said in a statement in March last year. That means its production comprised 9 percent of South Africa’s total output of 7.2 million tons that year, data on the website of the nation’s Iron and Steel Institute show.

Highveld employed 2 303 people that year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Industry struggles

ArcelorMit­tal’s local unit is the country’s largest producer, with 5.1 million tons in 2014.

The local steel industry was struggling as spending on infrastruc­ture projects remained low, manufactur­ing declined and cheaper imports entered the market, Abrie Audie, a spokesman for the Pretoriaba­sed steel institute, said.

Highveld had mainly supplied products to the constructi­on industry, he added.

Manufactur­ing output, which made up 12.5 percent of gross domestic product in the fourth quarter, contracted 0.5 percent in February from a year earlier.

South Africa expanded 1.5 percent last year, the slowest pace since a 2009 recession.

“The market is not in a great place right now,” Audie said. “The combinatio­n of higher costs, lower-quality imports and a lack of activity in the constructi­on space are hurting everyone.”

An agreement in which Macrovest 147 would buy 34 percent of Highveld for R289 million, which Evraz had announced in August, had lapsed, the local company said yesterday.

Macrovest is led by Barend Petersen, who is the executive chairman of De Beers Consolidat­ed Mines.

Highveld had a market value of R164m at the close on Monday. The shares have been suspended in Johannesbu­rg trading, after declining 47 percent since the beginning of the year. – Bloomberg

SABMILLER veteran Tony Van Kralingen was set to retire at the end of this year, the group said yesterday. Van Kralingen, 57, has been with SABMiller for 33 years and spearheade­d the group’s global expansion before its London listing and headed its South African operation before relocating to London in 2008. He was chairman and managing director of Plzenský Prazdroj, the brewer of Pilsner Urquell, in the Czech Republic from 1999 to 2003. This was South African Breweries’ (SAB) first foreign acquisitio­n before listing in London and embarking on its global expansion. He was then chairman and managing director of SAB, overseeing its rebranding as part of a global group SABMiller. Since 2008, he has been director for group procuremen­t, technical research and developmen­t and human resources. SABMiller shares eased 0.89 percent to R638.25 on the JSE yesterday. – African News Agency

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI ?? Evraz Highveld Steel and Vanadium has been hit by weakened global markets and a slump in domestic demand.
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI Evraz Highveld Steel and Vanadium has been hit by weakened global markets and a slump in domestic demand.

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