|      MOSCOW (Reuters) -    Russia's largest steelmaker Evraz scrapped its dividend on Thursday, citing a    precarious market outlook as it became the latest giant in the sector to post    a major net loss for 2012. The shock loss sent Evraz    shares down by 16 percent to an all-time low in London trading, before they    recovered to trade 9.2 percent lower on the session - the worst performance    of any stock in the FTSE 100 large-cap index. Steelmakers across the    world have been struggling to cope with weak prices as a growth slowdown in    China and Europe's debt crisis hit construction and industrial production.    Demand from the European Union alone slumped 9 percent last year. ArcelorMittal, the    world's top steelmaker, reported a multi-billion dollar loss for 2012, while    Evraz's Russian sector peers also significantly underperformed over the same    period. Evraz, controlled partly    by Chelsea football club owner Roman Abramovich, posted a 2012 net loss of    $335 million (217 million pounds) compared with profit of $453 the previous    year. Analysts on average had expected a net profit of $43 million. The firm said a $413    million impairment of its iron ore division was a key contributor to the 2012    loss. "Notwithstanding    some recent signs of stabilisation, global prospects remain fragile, with    strong downside risks and volatility likely to persist throughout the    year," Chief Executive Alexander Frolov said in a statement. LARGEST ONE-DAY FALL The share-price slide was    the largest daily fall since Evraz won a coveted FTSE 100 listing in 2011. A    40 percent decline in its share price since then has eroded the company's    market value to 2.8 billion pounds. The cancellation of a    final dividend payout for 2012 caused traders to hit the 'sell' button,    although Alexei Morozov, a steel analyst at UBS in Moscow, said the market    reaction may be overdone. "The market was    expecting a dividend, but ... not paying a dividend makes sense because their    leverage is not that low, so they don't want to be breaking any covenants and    putting the company under any additional stress," he said. Evraz, which like other    Russian steelmakers has been disposing of assets including subsidiary    Evraztrans to manage its $6 billion in debts, said it might permanently halt    smelting capacity at its Czech unit Vitkovice Steel or sell the entire    business. "If we find buyers    interested in continuing steel production at the unit, and the conditions are    right for us, then we would go for this option because it would be less    painful for the company and its employees," Chief Financial Officer    Giacomo Baizini said in a conference call. Evraz said it planned to    reduce capital expenditure by 10 percent in 2013 as it winds up investment    projects. While the net loss    contrasted with the net profit forecast by analysts, Evraz's 2012 revenue of    $14.7 billion - down 10.2 percent on a year earlier - was in line with    expectations. "Evraz may surprise    the market to the downside in the first half of 2013, as the company is    likely to face debt problems and its financial performance seems set to    deteriorate further," BCS analysts wrote in a note. Info: The    japanese carmakers remember three. four mil automobiles with regard to Takata    coussin autogonflant downside     |    
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