November 25, 2024

ArcelorMittal Reports Net Loss of $780 Million in Second Quarter

LONDON — ArcelorMittal, the world’s largest steel company, reported on Thursday a net loss of $780 million for the second quarter compared with net income of about $1 billion in the same period a year earlier. The company also reported $1.7 billion in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, the commonly used metric in the steel industry, a figure that was in line with analysts’ consensus forecasts. The company cut its Ebitda forecast for 2013 to $6.5 billion from “above $7.1 billion,” given its previous results in May.

The results were hurt by continued losses in Europe, where the company took $212 million in write-offs after closing plants at Florange in France. Production suffered in the United States as a result of labor problems and operational issues at plants at Burns Harbor and Indiana Harbor on Lake Michigan in Indiana.

The operating environment, especially in Europe, where ArcelorMittal has a large proportion of its production and employees, remains difficult. While steel shipments for the company, which is based in Luxembourg, rose 1.7 percent to 21.3 million tons, compared with the first quarter of 2013, the overall operating margin for the first half of 2013 was 1.9 percent, compared with 4.5 percent for the first half of 2012.

The main European unit, Flat Carbon Europe, which supplies flat steel for making cars and other products, posted an operating loss of $198 million for the quarter. The company says it averaged a loss of $28 on each metric ton of production at the unit, which has been highly unprofitable in recent years.

The company did say that the second half of 2012 had marked the lowest point in what has been a very trying few years since the financial crisis. “Although we have revised our full year guidance, the second half should deliver a clear underlying improvement relative to the second half of 2012, which we believe marked the lowest point in the cycle,” Lakshmi Mittal, the company’s chief executive, said in a statement.

It appears that the company, which Mr. Mittal built through acquisitions before the financial crisis, continues to face a long, hard journey. The company has closed plants in France and Spain and has idled others in Belgium and elsewhere, but the question is whether that will be sufficient. Other European steel executives say they believe that there is still substantial overcapacity in Europe, where only about 10 percent of the blast furnaces that were operating before the financial crisis have been shuttered, while demand for steel has fallen about 30 percent.

Robrecht Himpe, chief of European flat steel for ArcelorMittal, said in a statement that the unit’s production was up 2.8 percent compared with the first quarter, despite “the continued drop in European steel demand.”

Jeff Largey, an analyst at Macquarie in London, wrote in a research note that ArcelorMittal’s results showed “some encouraging signs of improvement in performance” in its Europe flat steel business. But he added that weak results in North America demonstrated that the company was “still subject to the volatility of the structurally challenged steel industry.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/02/business/global/arcelormittal-reports-big-drop-in-operating-income.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

AOL Says Ad Revenue Helped First-Quarter Earnings

The company attributed the growth largely to increasing advertising revenue. It said this revenue grew across all lines, but that combined third-party network and AOL Properties display ads were particularly strong, with revenue increasing 9 percent compared with a year earlier.

The company also showed signs of having kept internal costs down as adjusted operating income before amortization and depreciation rose 12 percent, to $105 million.

While the numbers were positive for a company that not two years ago was struggling to turn a profit, revenue did decline from the fourth quarter of fiscal 2012, when it was $599.5 million. The company reported earnings-per-share of 32 cents, which was just a shade below Wall Street’s expectations, and the stock fell 9.5 percent in morning trading.

In a call with financial analysts, the company’s chief executive, Tim Armstrong, emphasized that AOL’s strong performance on ad sales stemmed from its strategy of investing in high-quality programming for the Internet. “Our ad pricing has gone up based on premium formats on video and iterations of product on HuffPo and TechCrunch,” he said, referring to The Huffington Post.

The company said its total ad revenue grew to $359 million, from $330 million in the quarter a year earlier. Global display ads were up 8 percent to $140 million and third-party ads were up 10 percent to $121 million.

The company also experienced a 9 percent increase in search revenue, to $98 million, despite a 15 percent decline in AOL subscriptions in the United States over the year.

AOL said that, in fact, that it had slowed the decline of subscription revenue, but it was still down 9 percent year-to-year to $166 million.

AOL’s growth, while solid, did not keep pace with the rest of the digital market. Overall digital ad spending in the United States grew 14.8 percent to $9.64 billion in the first quarter of 2013, according to eMarketer. For the full year 2013, United States digital ad spending growth will reach 14 percent, eMarketer estimates.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/09/business/media/aol-says-ad-revenue-helped-first-quarter-earnings.html?partner=rss&emc=rss