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Austrian steelmaker’s profits melt down

Profits at Austrian steelmaker Voestalpine, which has been focusing on the high-end market to escape sector weakness, tanked as an energy sector downturn took its toll, the group said Tuesday.

Austrian steelmaker's profits melt down
Creative Commons/JWPhotowerks

Net profit fell 63.5 percent in the three months to June, Voestalpine's financial year, to  €105.8 million, while Ebit, a measure of operating profit, dropped 7.6 percent to €2.77 billion.

Steelmakers across the world have seen their profits and market capitalisations slump on weak steel demand and oversupply, often blamed on alleged steel dumping by Chinese producers. 

Voestalpine's response has been to focus on the market segment demanding the greatest degree of steel quality, such as railways, the car industry, high tech and tools.

This high-end strategy was paying off, Voestalpine said, protecting income from the global slump. But the company also supplies steel products to the oil and energy industry, where capital investment has been plunging because of low oil prices, ripping holes into Voestalpine's earnings.

“Although the global economic conditions became more challenging in the first quarter of the current business year and, as previously often forecast, left their mark on our earnings figures, those market segments that are most important for us – with the exception of the energy sector – remain at a stable and solid level,” chief executive Wolfgang Eder said in a statement.

Voestalpine said the earnings downturn had been expected, especially since the year-earlier bottom line had been boosted by one-off gains.

Stripping out non-recurring items, the net profit drop was 28.3 percent. Looking ahead, Voestalpine said that the higher prices it now commands in the steel contract business would feed into profits in the current financial year, and it also expected the oil and gas sector to start investing again.

This trend should lead to stable profits in the current year compared to the previous 12 months, Eder said.

But investors were disappointed in the earnings report and Voestalpine shares fell 2.2 percent to €31.36 on the Vienna stock exchange in early business Tuesday.

 

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BUSINESS

Where are Austria’s big international companies located?

Austria's most prominent international companies are involved in banking, insurance, and construction projects worldwide, many but are they all found in Vienna?

Where are Austria's big international companies located?

Here’s where each of the ten largest companies in Austria, by revenue generated last year, are located, both within Vienna and outside of the capital.

One of Central and Eastern Europe’s biggest insurance firms, the Vienna Insurance Group is headquartered in the capital. Their main offices are directly north of the Innere Stadt on Schottenring, close to the Rossau district.

A fellow insurance firm, the Uniqa Group, is located close by. Owning over fifteen significant insurance providers across Europe, they are market leaders alongside Vienna Insurance Group. Their headquarters can be found in the eponymous Uniqa Tower, on Ferdinandstraße close to the Karmeliterviertel.

Erste Group, one of the continent’s biggest providers of financial services, was founded just over two hundred years ago in Leopoldstadt, a suburb adjoining Vienna’s centre to the east. Today, the group is headquartered in the Erste Campus, less than a five-minute walk from Vienna’s central train station.

Founded in the fifties, OMV is the country’s largest oil and gas company. The company owns three European refineries, including one at Schwechat in Lower Austria, near the capital. The company is based in the Hoch Zwei building in the Second District, near the banks of the Danube.

Construction company Strabag, responsible for massive infrastructure projects across Europe and South East Asia, is located across the Danube from OMW, near the Austria Centre and the expansive Donaupark.

Banking giant Raiffeisen International is headquartered in the Weissgerberviertel, north of Vienna’s city centre. Other divisions, including their software development teams, are based throughout the city centre.

Construction company Porr Group, which has many subsidiaries in Austria and involvement in significant railway building projects throughout Europe, has headquarters in Vienna’s south, five kilometres away, in the Favoriten district.

Verbund AG, Austria’s largest energy provider, can also be found outside Vienna’s centre. It is based to the south-west, close to the Mariahilf district and the city’s Westbahnhof, or western train station.

Steel and technology group Voestalpine is located away from Vienna in Linz, Upper Austria, roughly equidistant between Salzburg and Vienna. The company’s headquarters can be found between the Spallerhof district and the Industriegebeit, or industrial area.

Finally, international metals and technology firm Andritz AG is also based outside Vienna, in Graz in Styria. Their headquarters is some distance from the city centre, in the district which gave the company its name: Graz-Andritz.

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