Thungela pushes ahead with acquisition plans even as coal prices fall
22 Aug 2023
Thungela
Resources CEO July Ndlovu speaks to Reuters during the Investing in African
Mining Indaba 2023 conference in Cape Town, South Africa, February 6, 2023.
REUTERS/Shelley Christians/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights
NAIROBI,
Aug 21 (Reuters) - Thungela Resources (TGAJ.J), South Africa's largest shipper
of coal burned in power stations, said it would push ahead with plans to
acquire new assets even as lower prices and challenges moving the fossil fuel
to local ports squeeze profits.
The Johannesburg-based miner's plans to diversify geographically
have not changed despite coal prices falling from record highs, CEO July Ndlovu
said.
"We are going to continue to look for assets and we have
always said we wanted to grow our business,," Ndlovu told Reuters in an
interview. "If you are in commodities, cycles come and go and the best
commodity investors are those who invest throughout the cycles."
The thermal coal producer spun off from Anglo American (AAL.L) in 2021 announced a deal
earlier this year to buy Ensham coal mine in Australia,
which Ndlovu said should be completed this month.
The CEO said Thungela has a strong cash position to pay
dividends and acquire new assets even as coal prices soften.
Thungela had 13.6 billion rand in net cash at end-June versus
14.8 billion rand a year earlier and has modelled its business on prices around
$90 per ton of coal.
The fundamentals for the fuel are very "attractive and
robust" with demand expected to remain strong in Asia, Ndlovu said.
"We are very fortunate in that we have a very flexible and
robust balance sheet," Ndlovu said.
Thungela and producers including Exxaro Resources (EXXJ.J) and Kumba Iron Ore (KIOJ.J) are stockpiling coal
and iron ore at their mines as
state-owned rail operator Transnet SOC struggles to move output to the
country's ports.
Thungela, which has about 2.7 million metric tons of coal worth
about 3 billion rand stockpiled, reported a 69% drop in first-half profit on
Monday.
The trajectory of Transnet's performance and future prices
"could require us to further review the size and shape of our
portfolio," Ndlovu said.
Thungela forecast output this year at between 11.5 million and
12.5 million tons from 13.1 million tons last year and against an annual
potential production capacity of about 16 million tons of coal. Ndlovu declined
to give production guidance for 2024.
Reporting by Felix Njini; editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise,
Kirsten Donovan