BLBG:Alcoa Sees Aluminum Cuts as Production Gains: Commodities
Alcoa Inc. (AA) Chief Executive Officer Klaus Kleinfeld said in January Chinaâs aluminum industry would cut 1.1 million metric tons of unprofitable capacity âpretty soon.â So far that prediction isnât close to coming true.
Chinaâs aluminum industry, the worldâs largest, saw output rise 18 percent in the first two months of the year, according to International Aluminum Association data. Thatâs helped to boost global supplies and create a surplus of the metal while curbing prices, which are down 22 percent from a year ago.
Declining prices and rising energy costs have eroded smelting margins, prompting New York-based Alcoa and its Norwegian competitor Norsk Hydro ASA (NHY) to announce 771,000 metric tons of capacity cuts this year. Chinaâs smelters are avoiding that fate because they donât appear to be paying market rates for power, said Ken Hoffman, an analyst at Bloomberg Industries. Chinese plants owned by local governments are resisting closures in order to preserve jobs, said Lloyd OâCarroll, an analyst at Davenport & Co.
âIf production is not economic, at some point it will be shut down,â OâCarroll, who is based in Richmond, Virginia, said in an interview. âThe question is how long will it take.â
Alcoa, the first company in the Dow Jones Industrial Average to report quarterly earnings, will publish its results after the close of trading today. It will post a first-quarter loss of 4 cents a share, according to the average of 19 analystsâ estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
Aircraft Demand
That would be the first time the company has reported two consecutive quarterly losses on an adjusted basis since 2009, when commodity markets were still reeling in the aftermath of the global financial crisis. Alcoa has fallen 46 percent in the past year, the most in the DJIA. Libby Archell, a spokeswoman for Alcoa, declined to comment.
To be sure, improved demand from U.S. auto and aircraft manufacturers and Chinese government stimulus will mean aluminum prices will be higher in the fourth quarter compared with a year earlier, OâCarroll said in a March 27 report. He also sees production cuts eventually whittling down the oversupply of aluminum, creating a deficit of 600,000 tons next year. Demand in the U.S. and Canada rose 6 percent in January, the Aluminum Association said yesterday.
Alcoa isnât wholly reliant on aluminum smelting, which accounted for about a third of its 2011 revenue. The flat-rolled and engineered products segments generated 53 percent of sales.
New Smelters
The company is building cheaper, more efficient capacity in Saudi Arabia. Kleinfeld, 54, said in January he plans to move Alcoa to the 41st percentile on the aluminum industryâs so- called production cost curve by 2015, from 51st.
The company has announced plans to shut plants in Texas, Tennessee, Spain and Italy this year, eliminating 12 percent of its capacity, or 531,000 tons. Norsk Hydro shut a 60,000-ton line at its Kurri-Kurri smelter in Australia and cut 180,000 tons at a German plant in January.
About one-third of Chinese capacity, or 5.7 million tons, is âbleeding moneyâ and wonât be able to afford power prices, Kleinfeld told analysts in a Jan. 9 conference call to discuss Alcoaâs fourth-quarter results.
Energy was the second-largest single cost in aluminum production in 2010, after bauxite, accounting for 26 percent of expenses, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Crude oil prices averaged 8.9 percent higher in the first quarter from a year earlier.
âStrategic Goodâ
Still, Chinese aluminum output climbed to 3.07 million tons in January and February, from 2.59 million tons a year earlier. Investors will be paying attention today to the gap between Kleinfeldâs prediction and whatâs going on in China, said Kuni Chen, an analyst at CRT Capital Group in Stamford, Connecticut.
âThe one thing theyâll need to address is that you have not seen any production cuts or production discipline out of China,â Chen said.
China will add another 2.9 million tons of output in 2012 as it builds plants at a faster rate than it shuts older ones, said OâCarroll, who has a buy rating on Alcoa and predicts a first-quarter profit of 7 cents a share.
âAluminum is a strategic good for China,â said Hoffman, who is based in Princeton, New Jersey. âThis helps China maintain and even increase capacity and production.â
Soaring Inventories
Global aluminum use will be 43.9 million tons in 2012, assuming Chinese consumption of 17.6 million tons, said Andrew Cosgrove, an analyst at Bloomberg Industries in Princeton, New Jersey. Supply will be 46 million tons, resulting in a 2.1 million-ton surplus, he said.
In addition to this surplus, inventories at warehouses monitored by the London Metal Exchange have more than tripled since Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for bankruptcy in September 2008. The stockpiles averaged 5.05 million tons in the first quarter, 11 percent higher than a year earlier, according to LME data.
Aluminum for delivery in three months on the LME averaged $2,219 a ton in the first quarter, 12 percent lower than a year earlier. The metal closed at $2,109 on April 5, the last trading day in London.
There may be more production cutbacks outside China this year. Oleg Deripaska, the CEO and largest shareholder of Russiaâs United Co. Rusal, said in December that falling prices may prompt smelters to shut down 3 million tons of capacity globally.
Rusal, the worldâs largest aluminum producer, has dropped 56 percent in the last year in Hong Kong trading. Aluminum Corp. of China Ltd., the countryâs biggest maker of the metal, has fallen 52 percent. Norsk Hydro has declined 37 percent.
âChinaâs structural problem is really the worldâs problem,â Hoffman said.
To contact the reporter on this story: Sonja Elmquist in New York at selmquist1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Simon Casey at scasey4@bloomberg.net