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31 Dec 2008
Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (Sabic) expects its diverse product portfolio to help it weather the impact of lower revenues from its steel business. Sabic, whose Hadeed steel affiliate is the kingdom's largest, has cut prices by 43 per cent since September on sagging demand.
"Conditions for steel are difficult, global prices have reached too low
a level to allow plants to break even and stocks are high, consumption
is also declining," vice-chairman and chief executive officer Mohamed
Al Mady said.
"But because we are a diversified firm that has many products, we are
at the present time breaking even unlike other steel firms," he said,
dismissing the possibility of redundancies.
State-owned Sabic controls 100pc of Hadeed. Mady could not say by how much steel demand has declined.
Sabic's metals business, made up essentially of Hadeed, accounted for
13.3pc of Sabic's profit in the nine months to September 30 and 10.3pc
of its turnover.
In addition to steel, the company produces fertilisers and
petrochemicals and holds stakes in aluminium companies such as
Bahrain-based Alba.
Saudi Arabia has steel production capacity of about 8.4 million tonnes,
of which 5.5m tonnes can be produced by Hadeed, according to the
website of Arab Steel, an industry association.
Saudi steel makers' woes are amplified by imports of steel mainly from Turkey and Ukraine.
Al Ittefaq Steel Products Company, one of the country's three largest
steel makers, has notified 80pc of its 2,145 workers that they will be
temporarily laid off over a three-month period starting tomorrow to cut
costs, a company official said.
Hadeed plans to more than triple its production capacity to 17m tonnes by 2020, its general manager Hisham Al Hamili said.
Having almost doubled in two years, steel prices started to decline
recently after authorities banned scrap metal exports and as demand
waned on spiralling costs which, along with other input costs, raised
fears over the viability of some projects.
Source: Gulf Daily News