BIZCHINA> Top Biz News
Container producer cuts production, 22,000 employees on leave
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2008-12-05 20:04

China International Marine Containers (Group) Co Ltd (CIMC) suspended its trading on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange on Friday, admitting it had stopped the production of dry vans, used for shipping general cargo, for two months.

"About 22,000 workers employed in the production sector have been given paid leave, and most of them have been receiving training for other posts. The company did not lay off any workers in the period," said a senior executive of CIMC, who declined to be named.

Special coverage:
Coping with Financial Crisis
Related readings:
Container producer cuts production, 22,000 employees on leave Storm hits shipping industry
Container producer cuts production, 22,000 employees on leave Shipbuilding industry to see blue in three years
Container producer cuts production, 22,000 employees on leave Transportation: Ports' toughest time still ahead
He said that the production suspension was part of the company's strategic adjustment.

"CIMC stopped the dry van production, as the global financial turmoil has hit the demand for container purchases. But the company has sufficient capital flow to withstand the turmoil," he said.

He did not rule out the possibility that the company would make an overseas investment through its strategic adjustment.

He said that the company would issue a public bulletin via the bourse once it was ready to resume stock trading.

CIMC also produces special containers, container hoisting facilities, road transportation and airport equipment.

The dry van sector accounted for nearly half of the company's business, and the number of staff currently on leave accounted for 38 percent of the company's total employees, said the company.

The company's third quarter revenue fell 2.7 percent year-on-year to 12.9 billion yuan ($1.91 billion), according to the stock analysis report by the Bank of China International.

The report pointed out that the CIMC's container sales dropped by 22.4 percent to 461,800 twenty-foot equivalent unit (TEU) containers in the third quarter, as clients either cut or delayed purchases.

The bank also lowered its forecast on CIMC's production from 2 million TEU containers to 1.9 million this year.


(For more biz stories, please visit Industries)