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Thai Banpu plans $ 466 million investment, to gently Outloo

  • Banpu BANP.BK, Thailand’s largest coal miner, said on Wednesday it planned to invest $466 million over the next six years, but warned lower average selling prices in 2010 would mean just single-digit revenue growth.

    “Most of our investment money for existing projects will be spent on
    coal rather than the power business,” Chief Executive Chanin
    Vongkusolkit told reporters, referring to spending plans starting next
    year.

    Of the total investments, $189 million would be for coal mining
    projects in Indonesia, $22 million for its coal business in China and
    the rest for its 40 percent owned Hongsa lignite power plant project in
    Laos, Chanin said.

    Under the plan, the company aimed for total coal production in China
    and Indonesia to rise to 33.5 million tonnes, he said, without giving a
    comparison.

    Banpu is also the fourth-biggest coal miner in Indonesia with five coal
    mines, and has three in China. It is now on the lookout for new assets
    in the region, mainly in Indonesia and Australia.

    “We are quite capable of getting help from financial institutions –
    with cash flow and assets worth about 50 billion baht and debt to
    equity of 0.24, say — if we were to win any bidding or acquire new
    businesses,” he added.

    Banpu shares closed up more than 3 percent on Wednesday at their
    highest in nearly a month at 462 baht, while the broad market .SETI was
    up 1.4 percent.

    On Tuesday it reported a higher-than-expected 22 percent rise in
    third-quarter net earnings after the market closed, helped by higher
    coal sales from Indonesian mines and gains from coal swaps.

    LOWER COAL PRICES

    Chanin said the company’s 2010 revenue would grow by a single-digit
    percentage from this year’s expected 57 billion baht ($1.71 billion) as
    it expected average coal prices in 2010 to fall below the $72 a tonne
    targeted this year.

    Sixteen analysts polled by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S forecast revenue of
    54.8 billion baht, down 1.6 percent from an expected 55.7 billion baht
    this year.

    “Sales in 2010 will still grow in volume, but having said that, average
    sale prices would be lower as we’ll be expecting more low-quality coal,
    which would weigh on sales growth,” he added.

    At the end of September, Banpu’s coal reserves stood at 581.4 million tonnes, down 1.1 percent from the previous quarter.

    Its average coal selling price in the third quarter was $69.49 per tonne, down 17 percent from a year earlier.

    Chanin said he expected fourth-quarter sales of about 16 billion baht,
    but Banpu would see “less net profit” compared to its 3.81 billion baht
    ($114.4 million) in the third quarter due to a maintenance shutdown at
    its 50 percent owned BLCP plant, along with a fall in average selling
    prices.

    Source: Reuters

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