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Usiminas, a Brazilian steel company, expects a slowdown in imports and warns against China shipments

Usiminas, a Brazilian steel company, expects a slowdown in imports and warns against China shipments

Executives at Brazilian steelmaker Usiminas said that they are confident in the anti-dumping laws of their country and expect a reduction in metal imports in the fourth quarter.

In a recent earnings call, CEO Marcelo Chara stated that the company is "attentive" and "concerned" about the increase in imports coming from China.

Usiminas posted a net loss for the third quarter of 3.5 billion reals ($647.68m) after taking an impairment loss of more than 2 billion dollars from revaluing its steelmaking assets. It said that without the impairment loss, it would have reported a net income of 108 millions reais as opposed to 185 million in the previous year. The quarter saw an increase of 9% in volume for iron ore, to 2.5 million metric tonnes. Steel sales dropped 2%, to 1.1 millions tons. The company expects lower sales of steel in the fourth quarter due to seasonality, but prices are expected to remain stable. The executives said that they are expecting positive cash flow for the next quarter, and are confident in further cost savings. Earnings were 434 millions reais for the quarter. This was up 2% compared to a year ago, but lower than the 458.7million reais that an LSEG survey had predicted. Analysts from BTG Pactual stated that the results were in line with the expectations but noted the "very challenging" environment for the steel division. Usiminas shares traded in Sao Paulo pared losses by more than 8%, to be about 1% lower at midday, underperforming Brazil’s benchmark Bovespa, which rose 0.3%.

(source: Reuters)