News Room - Steel Industry

Posted on 06 Nov 2020

ArcelorMittal shipments remain depressed, eyes further structural adjustments

ArcelorMittal says it is developing options for further structural cost improvements to prepare for the post-Covid-19 operating environment. This follows the closure in October of the Krakow plant’s hot-end. Further details will be provided with the full-year 2020 results in February.

Steel shipments fell -13% on-year in the third quarter to 17.5 million tonnes, but this was up 18% from Q2 as economic activity recovered across all regions following the Covid-19 impact. Crude steel output fell -23% on-year to 17.2mt but own iron ore output rose 9% to 14.8mt.

Consolidated sales fell -20% on-year in Q3 to $13.27 billion, although these rebounded 21% from Q2. Ebitda fell -15% on-year to $901 million but attributable net loss narrowed 52% to $261m.

The on-quarter sales rebound was primarily due to higher steel shipments, with a better sales mix – higher automotive volumes share – largely offsetting lower selling prices. Moreover, mining sales increased on-year and on-quarter thanks to higher iron ore prices.

“The easing of lockdown measures has seen activity levels improving since 2Q 2020; nevertheless, demand remains below normal and the pace and profile of recovery is uncertain,” ArcelorMittal says in a report seen by Kallanish. The company has begun to restart hot idled capacity as market demand improves on a region by region basis; however, concerns around second wave impacts persist.

“The experience of the last 6-7 months has, through necessity, forced the business to operate differently in particular with a leaner cost structure,” the company continues.

In the nine months through September steel shipments dropped -20% on-year to 51.8mt and crude steel output fell -25% to 52.7mt. Sales declined -29% to $39.09 billion, Ebitda was down -40% to $2.58 billion and net loss more than trebled to $1.94 billion.

Source:Kallanish