After dropping from US$40 to US$30 in the previous week, the shares of cobalt refiner
The previous week’s decline coincided with the United Nations’ pointing an accusing finger at OM in its report on illegal mining activities in the Democratic Republic of Congo — a charge OM denies.
In contrast, OM’s share collapse on Oct. 29 was triggered by the release of third-quarter results that reflected the sharp decline in cobalt prices over the past few months. Owing to a US$94-million writedown on inventories, the company lost US$71.2 million on revenue of US$1.4 billion in the third quarter, compared with a profit of US$20.4 million on revenue of US$833 million a year earlier.
Management commented that cobalt prices are likely to remain weak, the company will require a major restructuring, and the dividend will likely be suspended.
The rest of the base metal miners were mostly down in an uneventful week:
Almost all the U.S.-listed gold majors added to the previous week’s gains:
Be the first to comment on "OM in freefall"