Johannesburg - Anglo American Platinum [JSE:AMS], the world's top producer of the precious metal, warned earlier this week that it could not afford "unrealistic" wage rises, as it continues to battle loss-making mines and climbing costs.
Amplats, as the unit of miner Anglo American [JSE:AGL] is known, almost doubled its headline profit on Monday but that was largely due to a weakening in the rand. The group continued to burn cash in the first six months of 2013.
The platinum miner suspended dividend payments.
Amplats' Rustenburg mine northwest of Johannesburg, which has seen violent wage protests, bled R1bn in the six-months to end-June and the company's chief executive, Chris Griffith, said Amplats could not meet union wage hopes."The rand bailed us out, if that had not been the case we would have been in a lot more trouble," Griffith said on a conference call. "There is not a chance that we can give in to unrealistic wage demands."
He added the demands could spark further job cuts.
Amplats, battling to return to sustainable profits, plans to lay off up to 6 000 workers and close three shafts to scale back production. But it is also battling with unions asking it to more than double the basic wage for miners.
The company, which is 80% held by Anglo American said on Monday that diluted headline earnings totalled 512 cents per share compared with 272c a year earlier. The rand currency fell about 17% during the period, a boon for Amplats and other South African exporters.
"While the headline earnings look like there is an improvement, it is a low-quality number," said Justin Froneman, platinum analyst at SBG Securities in Johannesburg.
"What worries us is the estimated R2.6bn restructuring costs that are likely to come through in the second half."
While refined platinum production was flat year-on-year at 1.2 million ounces, the company has negative net-cash flow and its net debt is inching higher.
But Amplats is not alone. In the face of unrelenting cost escalation, platinum producers have been forced to shift priorities and sector-wide asset reviews have seen older shafts shut and growth projects shelved.
"At current spot prices, about 60% to 65% of the industry is underwater," said Froneman.
On Wednesday, shares of Amplats were up 4.35% at R323, outperforming the slightly firmer Top-40 benchmark equity index.