Weak Economy Cuts China’s Ansteel 2008 Net Profit 55%
January 31, 2009
China’s Angang Steel Co. Ltd. (Ansteel) said Wednesday net profit fell 55 percent last year to an estimated 3.42 billion yuan (about US$500 million) Ansteel prices plunged.
Ansteel, one of the country’s top three steel producers, issued the estimate in an unaudited statement to the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, where it is listed.
The final figure indicates a loss of 4.83 billion yuan in the fourth quarter, as previous company data show net profits in the first three quarters totaled 8.25 billion yuan.
The decline reflected steep falls in steel prices and slow inventory movement starting in the second half, said the northeast-based company.
Steel prices in China plummeted in the second half as the deepening world economic slowdown weakened industrial growth and steel demand in the country.
The price of 6.5 mm carbon steel wire rods, a major steel product, was down more than 40 percent since June, Jia Yinsong, a Ministry of Industry and Information Technology official, told a forum earlier in January. Market data show the product was sold at about 3,400 yuan per ton.
The company also attributed the weak performance to the costs of buying raw materials and fuel at high prices earlier in 2008.
World crude oil prices are down more than 70 percent since peaking at 147 U.S. dollars per barrel in July. Earnings per share were estimated at 0.47 yuan in 2008, down 58 percent from in 2007, Ansteel said.
The company didn’t give a date for the release of its audited results, which under Chinese rules must be done within six months.
Source: Xinhua News Agency
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New Development Zone to Take Shape Near Beijing
January 31, 2009
China’s port construction, steel and power giants will pour 192.9 billion yuan (28 billion U.S. dollars) for infrastructure construction in Caofeidian, an island-turned development zone in the Bohai Bay in north China, according to the city government of Tangshan, which administrates the zone.
Xinhua’s source with the government said on Wednesday that 65 billion yuan of the investment will be used for 105 infrastructure projects this year.
The 50-sq km development zone in Hebei Province is 220 km to the east of Beijing. It has been designated as a model of China’s environment-friendly industrial base.
The projects under construction this year will equip the zone with 200 million tons of port handling capacity and an initial industrial production condition for key companies, such as the Beijing Capital Iron and Steel Group’s steel plant, which moved from the capital city’s urban area to Caofeidian in 2007.
The Caofeidian industrial zone was put on China’s list of pilot areas for recyclable economy in October 2005. Chinese President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao both paid visits to the zone. They expect it to become a demonstration area for scientific development and recyclable development.
Caofeidian has been mapped to become the country’s largest steel production base by 2010. An evaluation by the country’s environmental watchdog shows the steel plant will ensure 99.5 percent of solid waste and 97.5 percent of waste water are recycled.
State-owned giants like Petro China and Huadian Power Group have also made the zone their energy base.
Caofeidian, once a small sand spit in the Bohai Bay, has extended into a land of more than 50 square km through sea fillings since 2003. The frame of a modern city is beginning to take shape here as crowds of elite technicians and industrial workers swarm to the zone.
Source: Xinhua News Agency
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China Likely to Launch Steel Product
January 30, 2009
China is likely to launch steel products futures trading this March on the Shanghai Futures Exchange, with linear steel and threaded steel to be the first futures varieties, according to an insider.
The introduction of steels futures will help enterprises prevent price risks through hedging and is helpful to restructuring of the domestic steel industry.
Also, it will help change China’s passive status in international iron ore negotiations. China may gradually gain some pricing power on the international steel market.
The source also said futures products of major building materials such as linear steel and threaded steel surely would come out earlier than rice futures.
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