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Rio Tinto's Profit to Remain Pressured by Costs, Analysts Say

Rio Tinto's Profit to Remain Pressured by Costs, Analysts Say

(Bloomberg) -- Rio Tinto Group may struggle to cut costs further after profit at the world’s second-biggest miner was hit by higher-than-expected energy and raw material prices at its aluminum unit, analysts say.

The cost of input materials, including coke and caustic soda, is likely to remain elevated, Chief Financial Officer Chris Lynch said on a conference call after higher expenses trimmed first-half earnings by $500 million at the company. The Sydney-listed shares fell 4.9 percent on Thursday, the most since February 2017, after Rio Tinto PLC declined 3.4 percent in London overnight.

“The easy cost out appears to be over,” Royal Bank of Canada analyst Paul Hissey wrote in a note to clients. “Unit-cost savings from here are more likely to be facilitated by increasing volumes rather than spending less.”

Rio Tinto reported underlying profit of $4.42 billion, the highest since 2014, and pledged to return $7 billion to shareholders after a series of asset sales.

Rio Tinto's Profit to Remain Pressured by Costs, Analysts Say

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Here’s what analysts are saying about Rio Tinto:

Royal Bank of Canada

  • Rising volumes, prices offset inflationary pressures, higher energy and operating costs
  • Investors may be buoyed by additional payouts
  • Maintains underperform; PT A$65

UBS

  • Market underestimated cost pressures from aluminum unit; iron ore costs rose from higher diesel, energy and labor, general inflation, cyclical maintenance and longer haul distances
  • Ongoing shareholder returns can be expected; there’s no “right” growth opportunities; net debt is at comfortable level
  • Maintains buy, PT cut to A$90 from A$93 on impact to earnings from higher central office costs and inflation

Shaw and Partners

  • Maintaining current iron ore cost position will become more challenging as proportion of material mined below water table increases
  • Earnings and dividend missed estimates; payout miss may be moot given $1b buyback top up and another $4b to be returned
  • Maintains buy, PT A$91

JP Morgan

  • Cuts medium-term earnings outlook on higher than expected aluminum costs; no indication of near-term cost relief
  • Maintains overweight given “still attractive” valuation, strong returns outlook; PT cut to A$94 from A$96

Data

  • 9 buys, 4 holds, 3 sells; avg. PT A$82.96
  • Shares up 2.4% YTD vs ASX 200 up 2.9%

To contact the reporter on this story: Matthew Burgess in Sydney at mburgess46@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Divya Balji at dbalji1@bloomberg.net, Tim Smith, Rebecca Jones

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