AMCU on the ropes in strike showdown

 

 

Ed Stoddard, Reuters, Sunday Times, Johannesburg, 27 April 2014

 

Labour took a machete to a gunfight with management in South Africa's
platinum belt.

 

Small wonder that it looks set to lose.

 

South Africa's big platinum strike has highlighted issues ranging from cash
reserves to changing market dynamics that have curtailed labour's ability to
influence prices.

 

The result has been to expose the weakness of the country's miners in any
confrontation with producers.

 

As it marked its 13th week, the showdown took a dramatic turn on Thursday
when marathon wage talks collapsed.

 

The world's three top producers now say they will take their latest offer
directly to employees.

 

They are effectively forcing the hand of the hardline Association of
Mineworkers and Construction Union (AMCU). The union's leaders were
reluctant to take the latest offer back to their members - probably because
they feared the rank and file would accept it after three months with no
pay.

 

A typical South African mine-worker has eight dependants, and often two
families, one in his home village and the other near the shafts. That means
many of them are now near breaking point, especially as domestic inflation
accelerates.

 

The companies - Anglo American Platinum, Impala Platinum and Lonmin - are in
a far more robust financial situation, although they have lost close to
R15-billion to date in revenue and counting.

 

Lonmin, for example, had a net cash position of $201-million at the end of
its 2013 financial year. The 70 000 striking workers have lost R6.5-billion
in wages so far, according to the industry.

 

Unlike the companies, few workers have the savings to weather this storm.

 

A Reuters analysis last year of the pay package for entry-level mineworkers
found it would meet the basic needs of a family of four, but not much else.
Many extended households are twice that size or more.

 

Analysts say the companies may be hurt, but can survive and even emerge
leaner and more profitable from the wreckage of the strike.

 

Painful restructuring and job cuts were likely, with the focus on Amplats's
Rustenburg operations.

 

If the Amplats share price is anything to go by, investors agree. It has
risen 17% since the start of the strike.

 

"Investors know that if Amplats shuts down everything and just keeps the
northern rim of their operations going, they will probably pay a bigger
dividend than keeping everything going," said Peter Major, a fund manager at
Cadiz Corporate Solutions.

 

Amplats and parent Anglo American have also signalled that they see the
future of platinum in more mechanised operations.

 

That is another advantage capital holds. Much of the mining labour force in
South Africa is semi-literate and drawn from subsistence- farming
backgrounds.

 

Lack of skills not only constrains productivity but also gives workers few
bargaining chips when it comes to a choice between them and technology.

 

AMCU and its charismatic president, Joseph Mathunjwa, also made a fatal
miscalculation when they bet the union could wring concessions by driving up
the metal's price.

 

That is a double-edged sword.

 

A higher price can cushion producers if they have unaffected operations. But
it can make their customers edgy and set off a scramble for alternatives,
while allowing labour to flex its muscles.

 

A higher price was one of the outcomes AMCU expected when it lined Amplats,
Implats and Lonmin up for a simultaneous strike unprecedented in scale.

 

It hit 40% of global production of the precious metal used for
emissions-capping catalytic converters in automobiles.

 

But spot platinum is about 2.5% cheaper than it was on the eve of the
strike, fetching around $1 410 an ounce. Mathunjwa has openly speculated
about capitalist efforts to suppress the price.

 

"So if there is little platinum, why doesn't the price go up? I told you
that they are manipulating it, so that it seems like they are not feeling
the pinch of the strike," he thundered at one recent rally.

 

Wider forces are at work, though perhaps not in a way that Mathunjwa
envisions. They explain why the disruption is not raising platinum's price
the way it would for other commodities, such as copper or nickel.

 

For one thing, above-ground stocks seem to be adequate to meet demand, which
remains sluggish in crucial markets such as Europe.

 

This is partly because the industry learnt its lessons from 2012, when AMCU
burst on the platinum belt in a wave of violent, wildcat strikes that hurt
production badly that year. Platinum investment has become an important
element of the overall market balance. In 2007, investment stood at 170 000
ounces, equivalent to 2% of total gross demand. By last year, it had grown
to 765 000 ounces, or 9% of demand.

 

One of the biggest factors driving demand growth last year was the
introduction of the NewPlat exchange-traded fund in South Africa.

 

Within four months of its listing in April last year, it had become the
largest fund of its kind in the world, mopping up nearly a million ounces of
metal last year.

 

During 2012's violence, 34 striking AMCU miners were shot dead by police
outside Lonmin's Marikana mine. In their confrontation with wider forces,
they remain outgunned.

 

Reuters

 

. This article was published in Sunday Times: Business Times

 

From:
http://www.bdlive.co.za/businesstimes/2014/04/27/amcu-on-the-ropes-in-strike
-showdown

 

 

 

-- 
-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"YCLSA Discussion Forum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to