JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – ArcelorMittal South Africa said on Friday its first-half loss narrowed compared to last year but earnings are expected to remain under strain because of weak domestic economic growth and labour disputes.
Africa’s biggest producer of steel reported a headline loss of 2 cents a share for the six months to end-June compared with a loss of 31 cents the same period last year. Headline earnings, the main profit gauge in South Africa, exclude certain one-off and non trading items.

The company, a unit of the world’s top steelmaker, said liquid steel production for the period declined 3.8 percent to 2.386 million tonnes, mostly due to a planned shutdown of a blast furnace at its Newcastle plant.
The company said its results for the third quarter would be under pressure from a weak local economy and a strike in the manufacturing sector.
“The effects of the metal and engineering strike will have short-term negative effects on our cost and on our customers,” it said in a statement.
South Africa’s main manufacturing union ended a four-week strike in the metals and engineering sector on Monday after accepting a wage increase offer from employers.
The metals strike came hot on the heels of a five-month walkout in the platinum sector, the longest and costliest strike in South Africa’s history.
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