(Bloomberg) -- ArcelorMittal South Africa Ltd. will close its business making long-steel products, after months of consultations with the government failed to stave off the threat to thousands of jobs.
The Johannesburg-listed subsidiary of Lakshmi Mittal’s multinational group said steel production will likely cease by the end of the month. That could potentially affect about 3,500 jobs, though the final number has yet to be determined, it said. The firm’s shares fell as much as 15% in early trading.
The move will come as a blow to South Africa’s business-friendly coalition government, seeking to revive an economy where growth has been outpaced by an increasing population over the past decade.
Persistently high logistics and energy costs, coupled with insufficient policy interventions by the South African government, made the operations unsustainable, the company said in a statement Monday. ArcelorMittal said the country’s steel industry is facing its “greatest sustained challenge” since the 2008 financial crisis. Deteriorating markets and cheap imports, particularly from China, have damaged the business, it said.
“We are disappointed that all our efforts over the last year have not translated into a sustainable solution,” Chief Executive Officer Kobus Verster said.
The wind-down will hit both the company’s Newcastle and Vereeniging plants, as well as the AMRAS rail mill. A scaled-back coke-making operation at Newcastle will continue, reflecting reduced demand for the product, it said.
The company announced its decision to shutter the business in November 2023, but temporarily delayed the closure after consulting with the government and state-owned freight firm.
ArcelorMittal South Africa expects its losses to have widened last year. Stripping out one-time items, its loss per share will range from 4.06 rand to 4.41 rand compared with 1.70 rand a year earlier, it said.
--With assistance from William Clowes.
(Updated with share price in second paragraph)
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