DALLAS, Texas – STRONG demand for lightweight aluminium in autos and airplanes is helping Alcoa Inc cope with lingering weak metal prices. The company said its second-quarter loss was wider than a year ago, but excluding costs for closing smelters and other restructuring and legal expenses, the results slightly beat Wall Street expectations.
Alcoa has customers in many industries, making it a gauge of the economy. And as the first member of the Dow index to report quarterly results, its results draw extra attention from investors.The company stuck to its forecast of seven per cent growth in global aluminium demand this year, led by a roughly 10 per cent increase for aerospace.Shares rose 11 cents, or 1.4 per cent, to end regular trading at US$7.92 before the quarterly results were released. In after-hours trading, they fell four cents.Aluminium prices skidded about eight per cent during the April-through-June quarter, further hurting the aluminium mining and smelting end of Alcoa.But other parts of Alcoa’s business — the sale of aluminium sheets and parts such as fasteners — are growing as carmakers and aircraft manufacturers use more aluminium for better fuel efficiency.US consumers who delayed car purchases during the recession bought more than 7.8 million vehicles from January through June, the auto industry’s best first half since 2007. And Boeing and Airbus have backlogs of hundreds of aircraft from airlines desperate to upgrade to newer, more fuel-efficient planes.Alcoa is closing two smelter lines in Canada and a smelter in Italy, but it’s expanding mills in the US that cater to the auto and aerospace industries.Despite the boost from cars, planes and cost-cutting, Alcoa has been the worst-performing stock in the Dow Jones industrial average this year, down 9 percent. And in May, Moody’s Investors Service lowered the company’s credit rating to junk status, citing continuing weak prices for aluminum.Chairman and CEO Klaus Kleinfeld said Monday that the company was disappointed by the downgrade, which he said reflected Moody’s view of the economy and aluminium prices rather than Alcoa’s strategy and performance.“We control what we can control, and we can’t control the metal price volatility,” he said on a conference call with analysts.The US-headquartered company reported a second-quarter loss of US$119 million, or 11 cents per share. That compared with a loss of US$2 million, or break-even on a per-share basis, a year earlier.Excluding US$195 million in restructuring and legal-expense items, Alcoa said it would have earned seven cents per share, a penny more than analysts expected. Revenue fell two per cent to US$5.85 billion, matching the forecast of analysts surveyed by FactSet.Kleinfeld said the company turned in a “remarkable” operating performance in the face of falling metal prices by “restructuring, curtailing, and closing facilities and (we) made progress addressing legacy legal issues.”Alcoa is negotiating with the US Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission to settle claims that it paid millions in bribes to get Aluminium Bahrain BSC, or Alba, to overpay Alcoa for raw materials.The company said it proposed to settle by paying the Justice Department US$103 million, and it took a charge in that amount. But the company said there could be “an additional possible charge of up to approximately US$200 million to settle the DOJ matter.”Alcoa added that the SEC staff rejected a US$60 million settlement offer. It said any payments to the government would be stretched over several years.Alcoa’s Fjardaal aluminium smelter in Reydarfjordur, Iceland, an environmentally friendly plant that utilises hydroelectric power.Alcoa said its second-quarter loss widened due to weak aluminium prices. (PHOTO: AP)View the original article here
Alcoa posts US$119m loss