Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

South African platinum sector girds for wage talks, pleads poverty

Mon, 08th Feb 2016 12:30

* Amplats, Impala and Lonmin gear up for talks in June

* Platinum price down around 30 pct year-on-year

By Ed Stoddard and Zandi Shabalala

CAPE TOWN, Feb 8 (Reuters) - The world's top platinumproducers, which are losing money as costs soar and prices sink,are pleading poverty in advance of South African wage talks setto start in April.

Anglo American Platinum, Impala Platinum and Lonmin will again be sitting around the table withthe hardline Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union(AMCU), which lead a five-month strike in 2014.

"The companies very focused on getting the message across ofthe dire economic situation that platinum is in," Elize Strydom,the chief negotiator for South Africa's Chamber of Mines, toldreporters at an industry conference in Cape Town.

"They are really doing a lot of leg work from CEO level tothe investor relations people to share the realities of what ishappening in platinum," she said.

Prices for platinum, used for emissions-cappingcatalytic converters in automobiles, lost a quarter of theirvalue last year and were down 30 percent year-on-year at thestart of February.

Underscoring the industry's woes, Amplats reported an 86percent drop in full-year profit on Monday, hit by write-downsand restructuring costs amid depressed prices.

Lonmin recently had to go back to shareholders for a rightsissue to shore up its battered balance sheet.

"The best time to influence the demands is obviously beforethe negotiations begin. To bring some realism into the wholedebate," Strydom said.

The current wage agreements expire in June.

The Chamber of Mines reckons that about 80 percent of SouthAfrica's plantinum industry is currently loss-making. The wagetalks will involve around 125,000 workers, Strydom said.

One thing that needs to be ironed out is whether the talkswill take place at the company level, or will the trio cometogether for collective talks with AMCU, which is known for itsuncompromising approach to wage negotiations.

"The preference of the industry is that they would prefer todo it centrally. It saves time," Strydom said. (Editing by James Macharia)

Related Shares

More News
10 May 2019 08:45

Lonmin warns on sales as takeover drags on

(Sharecast News) - Lonmin warned annual sales would be at the lower end of expectations on Friday after production fell and the platinum miner was dis...

25 Apr 2019 16:30

Sibanye Gold Agrees To Increase All-Share Offer For Lonmin By Over 3%

LONDON (Alliance News) - Sibanye Gold Ltd on Thursday said it has reached an agreement with Lonmin PLC on the terms of an increased recommended all-sh...

15 Apr 2019 09:24

Braemar Shipping Appoints DX's Chair Ronald Series In Same Role

LONDON (Alliance News) - Braemar Shipping Services PLC on Monday said it appointed Ronald Series as non-executive chair with immediate effect.Braemar ...

3 Apr 2019 16:12

Rambler Metals Hires Another Mandalay Resources Executive As CEO

LONDON (Alliance News) - Rambler Metals & Mining PLC on Wednesday said Andre Booyze will replace Norman Williams as chief executive with immediate eff...

25 Mar 2019 13:23

Lonmin paints bleak picture as it calls on shareholders to back takeover

(Sharecast News) - Lonmin issued a stark warning on Monday, telling investors it does not have the funds needed to sustain the business long-term, and...

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.