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Kumba Iron Ore to cut 490 tasks as rail crisis hits output, shares fall

Kumba Iron Ore shares fell more than 5% on Tuesday after it announced plans to cut about 490 tasks, following a decrease in production as it has a hard time to conquered South Africa's persistent rail traffic jams.

In December, the Anglo American Plc system stated it was curbing production to match the restricted capability of state-owned rail operator Transnet, struck by shortages of locomotives and spares, as well as rampant cable theft and vandalism.

Stockpiles of iron ore stood at 7.1 million loads in December and the consistent obstacle in moving the product to ports for exports has actually required Kumba to cut output to between 35 million heaps to 37 million tons from this year to 2026.

Kumba CEO Mpumi Zikalala said during a conference call that the proposed task cuts, combined with the restructuring of head office functions which started last September, would affect 10% of the company's workforce. The business used about 7,000 full-time personnel, according to its 2022 yearly report.

The restructuring is required for Kumba to stay competitive, the business said.

Task losses across South Africa's mining sector due to weaker commodity costs and infrastructure difficulties add pressure for the federal government ahead of elections due later this year.

South Africa's main jobless rate, measured at 31.9% in the third quarter of 2023, is amongst the greatest in the world.

On Monday, Anglo American Platinum announced strategies to cut 3,700 tasks in South Africa after a sharp decrease in metal costs slashed yearly profit by 71%.

Kumba's headline revenues per share rose 26% to 70.80 rand in the year ended Dec. 31, up from 56.19 rand the previous year as its high grade iron ore continues to bring rates 15% above the benchmark rate.

(source: Reuters)