African miner Petra Diamonds, which has high debt levels, aims
to be cash-flow positive in the second half of the year and will then be
able to consider future developments, its new CEO said on Monday.

The company’s share price has fallen 55% since the start of the year
as weak diamond prices
weighed and Petra grapples with debt following
years of capital expenditure to upgrade its mines.
On Monday, the company reported lower output in the quarter ended
March 31, as an upgrade of operations at one of its mines fell behind
schedule, but also said it sees signs that diamond prices are
recovering.
CEO Richard Duffy, who took office at the start of the
month, said his short-term focus was “on stabilising the operations as
we transition from a stage of high-capital investment”.
The company would be on track to consider future developments, he
said, once it has delivered free cash flow and cut net debt, which was
about 3.3-times EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and
amortisation) at the end of last year, versus a goal of 2-times.
“I’m two weeks into the job,” Duffy said in a maiden round of media
interviews, when asked about strategy. “We expect to announce strategy
towards the end of the calendar year.”
On Monday, Petra’s share price was 0.2% lower by 12.13pm.
A new section at Petra’s flagship Cullinan mine in SA has the
potential to be rich in high-quality stones, the company says. In March
it said it had found a 425-carat diamond, which it plans to sell later
this year.
Edward Sterck, analyst at BMO Capital Markets, which rates Petra
“outperform”, said a pick-up in special diamond recoveries was “the
significant catalyst that investors have been waiting for”.
The company meanwhile is in talks with its SA lenders on new terms, which it expects to finalise by the end of the month.
It is also negotiating with the Tanzanian authorities over a parcel
of diamonds seized in September 2017, in a crackdown on foreign mining
companies as the government seeks more revenue from its minerals.
Petra’s Williamson mine in Tanzania delivered a 21% increase in
year-on-year output, helping to offset the impact of delay in an upgrade
at SA mine Finsch.
“We’re continuing to engage with the authorities. It’s difficult to
talk about time, but we are having constructive conversations,” Duffy
said.
- Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment