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Mineral Resources of Australia has its worst day for 16 years due to production problems and higher costs

Mineral Resources of Australia has its worst day for 16 years due to production problems and higher costs

Mineral Resources shares (MinRes), the Australian mining company, plunged Wednesday to their lowest day in 16-years after it cut its fiscal production volume for 2025 and increased costs for its Onslow Iron Project in Pilbara because of weather disruptions.

Shares of the company fell 22.1%, to A$23.75. This is their lowest level since late July 2020. It was also their largest single-day drop since October 10, 2008 Stock was the biggest loser in the benchmark ASX 200 Index, which fell 0.7%.

The miner reduced its previous forecast of iron ore volume to 8.8-9.3 Mt for the financial year 2025, from an estimated 10.5-11.7Mt. The miner also increased its free-onboard costs or charges for transporting iron ore to $60/ton to $70/ton, up from $58/t to 68/t.

"The cyclone Sean) dumped an unusual amount of rain in parts of the Pilbara, and the deluge grew days later when a low pressure system deposited more heavy rains inland. The weather caused flooding which damaged the Onslow Iron haulage road.

Rio Tinto and other iron ore mining companies have been affected by the record rainfall in Western Australia's Pilbara region as well as tropical cyclones.

MinRes announced late on Tuesday that its adjusted earnings before interests, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA), which was A$302 millions ($192.13) still beat Visible Alpha's estimate of A$205.

Jefferies analysts estimate that the company will spend A$2.1 billion on capital expenditures for the fiscal year 2025, an increase of A$340 millions from their previous estimates.

The medium-term downside risks presented by (MinRes's), elevated debt, in an environment of declining iron ore, softer lithium, higher capital expenditure and lower lithium production, prevents us turning more positive." $1 = 1.5718 Australian Dollars (Reporting and editing by Sonia Cheema in Bengalur; Nikita Jino, Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)