Companies

Wuhan Iron and Steel H1 profit nearly double on rising sales

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-08-23 11:10
Large Medium Small

BEIJING - Wuhan Iron and Steel Company Ltd, the listed subsidiary of China's third largest steel maker, said Sunday that its net profit rose 90.43 percent year on year to 963.53 million yuan ($141.7 million) during the first half of the year as strong economic growth boosted steel demand and prices.

The company's first-half-year sales reached 34.36 billion yuan, up 50.72 percent from one year earlier, it said in a statement delivered to the Shanghai Stock Exchange.

However, costs also climbed in the first six months compared with a year earlier because of increases in raw material prices, it said.

Production costs for steel products gained 47.12 percent year on year to 31.18 billion yuan.

Special Coverage:
2010 Interim Results of Listed Companies
Related readings:
Wuhan Iron and Steel H1 profit nearly double on rising sales Wuhan Iron & Steel snaps up Venezuelan ore
Wuhan Iron and Steel H1 profit nearly double on rising sales Wuhan Iron & Steel to increase output by 24% next year
Wuhan Iron and Steel H1 profit nearly double on rising sales Wugang to pay $400m for stake in MMX
Wuhan Iron and Steel H1 profit nearly double on rising sales Centrex shares soar as Oz govt approves Wugang investment
Further, the company's steel output in the first half of the year gained 29.75 percent year on year to 8.04 million tons.

China's producer price index, a major gauge of inflation at the wholesale level, rose 6 percent in the January-June period, according to statistics released by the National Bureau of Statistics.

However, the company was likely to face a "difficult time" in the second half of 2010 and meeting its full-year profit target would become a "challenging task" as demand from auto, home appliance and real estate sectors experienced "drastic changes" since July, leading to more restrained sales and falling prices, it said.

Company officials also worried that high prices of iron ore, coal and electricity would further push up production costs and squeeze profit margins.

On Friday, the price of its shares fell 2.87 percent to 4.73 yuan on the Shanghai bourse.