Jiangxi Copper Co, China’s top copper producer, on Tuesday posted its smallest net income in more than two years as first-quarter profits fell 78.4% on lower copper prices in the wake of the novel coronavirus outbreak.
The Nanchang-based company said in a filing to the Shanghai Stock Exchange its net income was 160.26 million yuan ($22.65 million) in January-March 2020, down from 742.35 million yuan a year earlier.
That marked Jiangxi Copper’s lowest quarterly profit since the fourth quarter of 2017, according to Refinitiv Eikon data, and came as benchmark copper prices slumped to four-year lows last month, with investors betting the pandemic would destroy demand for industrial metals.
Revenues were up 15% year-on-year at 56.21 billion yuan on higher production. Jiangxi Copper, an integrated producer that operates both mines and smelters, last year acquired a 30% controlling stake in Shandong Humon Smelting Co and started including Humon’s output in its own numbers from July.
It said last month it aimed to raise refined copper production by 6% in 2020..
However, margins were eroded by lower copper prices, which fell almost 20% on the London Metal Exchange in January-March, their steepest quarterly drop since 2011.
London copper slumped to $4,361 a tonne in late March, the lowest since January 2016, but has since recovered to around $5,200 a tonne.
Jiangxi Copper, which is also the biggest shareholder in Canada-listed miner First Quantum Minerals, said earlier this month it planned to raise its stake in Humon to 43.2% via a private share issue.
($1 = 7.0743 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(By Tom Daly; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
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