ArcelorMittal reports third quarter 2022 results
ArcelorMittal (MT) reported its Q3 2022 financial results, highlighting significant declines in operating income and net income due to various market challenges. Operating income fell to $1.7 billion from $4.5 billion in Q2 2022, while net income dropped to $993 million compared to $3.9 billion in the previous quarter. Steel shipments also decreased by 5.6% sequentially. Despite these challenges, the company repurchased 31 million shares in the quarter, maintaining a robust net cash position of $3.9 billion by the end of September 2022.
- Share repurchase of 31 million shares during Q3 2022, totaling $0.7 billion.
- Maintained strong net cash position of $3.9 billion as of September 30, 2022.
- EBITDA of $2.7 billion in Q3 2022, despite lower steel shipments.
- Operating income decreased to $1.7 billion in Q3 2022, down from $4.5 billion in Q2 2022.
- Net income fell to $993 million in Q3 2022, compared to $3.9 billion in Q2 2022.
- Steel shipments decreased by 5.6% sequentially to 13.6 million tons.
Luxembourg, November 10, 2022 - ArcelorMittal (referred to as “ArcelorMittal” or the “Company”) (MT (New York, Amsterdam, Paris, Luxembourg), MTS (Madrid)), the world’s leading integrated steel and mining company, today announced results1,2 for the three-month and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2022.
Key highlights:
- Health and safety performance: Protecting the health and well-being of employees remains the Company’s overarching priority; LTIF rate3 of 0.54x in 3Q 2022 as compared to 0.67x in 2Q 2022
- Steel spread compression and seasonally lower shipments: 3Q 2022 was impacted by a negative price-cost effect, energy costs headwinds and a
5.6% sequential decrease in steel shipments to 13.6Mt (-7.1% lower vs. 3Q 2021). Steel shipments remain broadly stable YoY excluding ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih which is impacted by the ongoing war in Ukraine - Operating income:
$1.7b n in 3Q 2022 (vs.$4.5b n in 2Q 2022); 9M 2022 operating income of$10.6b n (vs.$12.4b n in 9M 2021) - EBITDA:
$2.7b n in 3Q 2022 vs.$5.2b n in 2Q 2022; 9M 2022 EBITDA of$12.9b n (vs.$14.4b n in 9M 2021) - Net income:
$1.0b n in 3Q 2022 (vs.$3.9b n in 2Q 2022); 9M 2022 net income of$9.0b n (vs.$10.9b n net income in 9M 2021) - Share repurchases driving enhanced value: Company repurchased a further 31m shares during the quarter (96.2m in 9M 2022); diluted share count now 873m (vs. 1,224m at end of September 30, 202020); 3Q 2022 basic EPS of
$1.11 /sh; 9M 2022 basis EPS of$9.76 /sh vs$9.52 /sh for 9M 2021 benefiting from lower share count; last 12 months ROE15 of26% ; book value per share12 of$59 /sh - Further FCF generation: Free cash flow (FCF) of
$1.1b n in 3Q 2022 ($2.0b n net cash provided by operating activities less capex of$0.8b n less minority dividends$0.1b n) despite$0.6b n investment in working capital; FCF to be supported by a working capital release in 4Q 2022 - Financial strength: Net debt of
$3.9b n at the end of September 2022 as compared to$4.2b n at the end of June 2022 and$4.0b n at the end of December 2021; Gross debt of 9.0bn as at end of September 2022
Strategic update:
- Decarbonization leadership: ArcelorMittal breaks ground on first transformational low-carbon emissions steelmaking project in Dofasco (Canada)19
- Strategic growth: AMNS India announced its strategy to capture growth, expand its market share and play a leading role in the development of the Indian steel industry. Expansion of the Hazira plant to a ~15Mt capacity by early 2026 is underway including automotive downstream and enhancements to iron ore operations, with capex of ~
$7.4b n and targeting to increase the EBITDA capacity by 2.5x4 - Consistently returning capital: As at September 30, 2022, the Company had completed approximately
50% (i.e. ~31 million shares or ~$0.7b n) of the previously announced share buy-back program which totaled 60 million shares, with the balance to be completed by the end of May 2023
Financial highlights (on the basis of IFRS1,2):
(USDm) unless otherwise shown | 3Q 22 | 2Q 22 | 3Q 21 | 9M 22 | 9M 21 |
Sales | 18,975 | 22,142 | 20,229 | 62,953 | 55,765 |
Operating income | 1,651 | 4,494 | 5,345 | 10,578 | 12,418 |
Net income attributable to equity holders of the parent | 993 | 3,923 | 4,621 | 9,041 | 10,911 |
Basic earnings per common share (US$) | 1.11 | 4.25 | 4.17 | 9.76 | 9.52 |
Operating income/ tonne (US$/t) | 122 | 313 | 366 | 244 | 263 |
EBITDA | 2,660 | 5,163 | 6,058 | 12,903 | 14,352 |
EBITDA/ tonne (US$/t) | 196 | 359 | 414 | 298 | 304 |
Crude steel production (Mt) | 14.9 | 14.6 | 17.2 | 45.8 | 52.6 |
Steel shipments (Mt) | 13.6 | 14.4 | 14.6 | 43.3 | 47.2 |
Total group iron ore production (Mt) | 10.6 | 12.0 | 13.0 | 34.6 | 37.5 |
Iron ore production (Mt) (AMMC and Liberia only) | 6.9 | 7.3 | 6.8 | 21.1 | 19.0 |
Iron ore shipment (Mt) (AMMC and Liberia only) | 6.9 | 7.5 | 6.9 | 21.1 | 18.9 |
Number of shares outstanding (issued shares less treasury shares) (millions) | 816 | 847 | 971 | 816 | 971 |
Commenting, Aditya Mittal, ArcelorMittal Chief Executive Officer, said:
“The strong market conditions enjoyed for much of the past two years deteriorated in the third quarter as seasonally lower shipments, a reduction in exceptional price levels, destocking and higher energy costs combined to put profits under pressure. The business responded quickly to the changing environment, cutting higher cost capacity to manage addressable demand and reduce fixed costs, and reducing European gas consumption by
The group’s decarbonization goals remain a central part of the strategy, with a key development being the ground breaking last month in Ontario, Canada, for a new DRI-EAF plant, which is hydrogen ready. This is an important milestone in our decarbonization roadmap and has been achieved thanks to support from both the regional and federal governments. With COP27 underway we hope for progress on measures that can accelerate the road to net zero, including the scaling up of renewable energy, critical for both the decarbonization of steel and enhanced energy security.
The short-term outlook for the industry remains uncertain and caution is appropriate. But, ArcelorMittal has the strength, resilience and experience to face the future with confidence. Supported by a strong balance sheet, we will continue to focus on executing our strategy, designed to ensure our long-term sector leadership, as well as deliver sustainable investor returns.”
Sustainable development and safety performance
Health and safety - Own personnel and contractors lost time injury frequency rate18
Protecting the health and wellbeing of employees is the Company’s overarching priority with ongoing strict adherence to World Health Organization guidelines (in respect of COVID-19), and specific government guidelines have been followed and implemented.
Health and safety performance based on own personnel and contractors lost time injury frequency ("LTIF") rate was 0.54x in the third quarter of 2022 ("3Q 2022") as compared to 0.67x in the second quarter of 2022 ("2Q 2022) and 0.76x in the third quarter of 20213 ("3Q 2021"). Health and safety performance in the first nine months of 2022 (“9M 2022”) was 0.63x as compared to 0.80x in the first nine months of 2021 (“9M 2021”).
Own personnel and contractors - Frequency rate
Lost time injury frequency rate | 3Q 22 | 2Q 22 | 3Q 21 | 9M 22 | 9M 21 |
NAFTA | 0.27 | 0.28 | 0.48 | 0.27 | 0.45 |
Brazil | 0.05 | 0.14 | 0.10 | 0.09 | 0.17 |
Europe | 1.03 | 0.99 | 1.38 | 1.05 | 1.23 |
ACIS | 0.50 | 0.81 | 0.80 | 0.63 | 0.94 |
Mining | 0.30 | 0.30 | — | 0.92 | 0.44 |
Total | 0.54 | 0.67 | 0.76 | 0.63 | 0.80 |
Sustainable development highlights – leading the decarbonization of the steel industry:
- On November 3, 2022, ArcelorMittal announced it has invested
$25 million in nuclear innovation company TerraPower through its XCarb® innovation fund8. The investment is part of an$830 million equity raise TerraPower has concluded, which is the largest private raise among advanced nuclear companies. TerraPower, which was founded by Bill Gates in 2008, entered the nuclear energy arena because the company’s founders saw clean energy as the pathway to lift billions out of poverty. It has spent the last decade investing in and developing ground-breaking nuclear technologies.
Its flagship technology is Natrium™, which features a cost-competitive sodium fast reactor combined with a molten salt energy storage system. This combination will provide clean, flexible energy and integrate seamlessly into power grids with high penetrations of renewables. TerraPower is experiencing significant growth, and is currently building its first Natrium™ reactor, a TerraPower and GE Hitachi technology, as part of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Reactor Demonstration Program (ARDP). The facility, being constructed near the site of a retiring coal plant in Kemmerer, Wyoming, will feature a 345 MWe sodium fast reactor alongside an energy storage system that can boost output to 500 MWe during peak demand. Large scale, first-of-a-kind, energy generation projects like the Natrium™ project take years to come to fruition, and TerraPower is targeting an in-service date for the project within this decade.
- On October 13, 2022, ArcelorMittal together with the governments of Canada and Ontario, broke ground on its CAD
$1.8 billion investment decarbonization project at the ArcelorMittal Dofasco plant in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The governments of Canada and Ontario having committed CAD$400 million and CAD$500 million respectively to the overall project cost. The project will fundamentally change the way steel is made at ArcelorMittal Dofasco, transitioning the site to direct reduced iron-electric arc furnace steelmaking, which carries a considerably lower carbon footprint and removes coal from the ironmaking process. The new 2.5Mt capacity DRI furnace will initially operate on natural gas but will be constructed ‘hydrogen ready’ so it can transition to green hydrogen when a sufficient and cost-effective supply becomes available.19 - On October 4, 2022, ArcelorMittal announced it has invested a further
$17.5 million in Form Energy Inc. via its XCarb® innovation fund. This is the second investment ArcelorMittal has made in the company, following its initial investment of$25 million announced in July 2021. Form Energy is developing, manufacturing, and commercializing a new class of cost-effective, multi-day energy storage systems that will enable a reliable and fully renewable electric grid year-round. - On September 22, 2022, ArcelorMittal announced that ArcelorMittal Poland had received ResponsibleSteel™ certification, following a successful audit carried out by DNV Poland which confirmed that the business fulfils the criteria required to earn certification against the ResponsibleSteel Standard. ArcelorMittal Poland is the first cluster of sites to be certified in Eastern Europe by ResponsibleSteel, the industry’s first global multi-stakeholder standard and certification initiative.
Analysis of results for 3Q 2022 versus 2Q 2022 and 3Q 2021
Total steel shipments in 3Q 2022 were 13.6Mt, -
3Q 2022 steel shipments were -
Sales in 3Q 2022 were
Depreciation for 3Q 2022 was
Exceptional items for 3Q 2022 of
Operating income for 3Q 2022 was
Income from associates, joint ventures and other investments9 for 3Q 2022 was
Net interest expense in 3Q 2022 was
Foreign exchange and other net financing losses in 3Q 2022 were
ArcelorMittal recorded an income tax expense of
ArcelorMittal recorded a net income for 3Q 2022 of
Analysis of segment operations2, 11
NAFTA
(USDm) unless otherwise shown | 3Q 22 | 2Q 22 | 3Q 21 | 9M 22 | 9M 21 |
Sales | 3,438 | 3,653 | 3,423 | 10,851 | 9,201 |
Operating income | 616 | 817 | 925 | 2,487 | 1,861 |
Depreciation | (114) | (93) | (70) | (300) | (212) |
Exceptional items | 92 | — | — | 92 | — |
EBITDA | 638 | 910 | 995 | 2,695 | 2,073 |
Crude steel production (kt) | 2,126 | 2,043 | 1,994 | 6,246 | 6,441 |
Steel shipments * (kt) | 2,339 | 2,453 | 2,280 | 7,248 | 7,381 |
Average steel selling price (US$/t) | 1,191 | 1,317 | 1,303 | 1,278 | 1,064 |
* NAFTA steel shipments include shipments sourced by NAFTA from Group subsidiaries and sold to the Calvert JV that are eliminated on consolidation.
NAFTA segment crude steel production increased by +
Steel shipments in 3Q 2022 decreased -
Sales in 3Q 2022 decreased by -
Exceptional items for 3Q 2022 of
Operating income in 3Q 2022 declined -
EBITDA in 3Q 2022 of
Brazil16
(USDm) unless otherwise shown | 3Q 22 | 2Q 22 | 3Q 21 | 9M 22 | 9M 21 |
Sales | 3,486 | 3,986 | 3,606 | 10,838 | 9,404 |
Operating income | 598 | 1,201 | 1,164 | 2,473 | 2,906 |
Depreciation | (57) | (71) | (59) | (186) | (168) |
Exceptional items | — | — | (123) | — | (123) |
EBITDA | 655 | 1,272 | 1,346 | 2,659 | 3,197 |
Crude steel production (kt) | 2,969 | 3,085 | 3,112 | 9,094 | 9,296 |
Steel shipments (kt) | 2,837 | 3,003 | 2,829 | 8,877 | 8,661 |
Average steel selling price (US$/t) | 1,137 | 1,234 | 1,196 | 1,137 | 1,023 |
Brazil segment crude steel production decreased by -
Steel shipments of 2.8Mt in 3Q 2022 were -
Sales in 3Q 2022 decreased by -
Operating income in 3Q 2022 of
EBITDA in 3Q 2022 decreased by -
Europe
(USDm) unless otherwise shown | 3Q 22 | 2Q 22 | 3Q 21 | 9M 22 | 9M 21 |
Sales | 10,694 | 13,449 | 11,228 | 37,186 | 31,255 |
Operating income | 158 | 2,063 | 1,925 | 4,302 | 3,786 |
Depreciation | (300) | (326) | (284) | (952) | (899) |
Exceptional items | (473) | — | — | (473) | — |
EBITDA | 931 | 2,389 | 2,209 | 5,727 | 4,685 |
Crude steel production (kt) | 7,998 | 8,261 | 9,091 | 24,948 | 28,174 |
Steel shipments (kt) | 7,079 | 7,967 | 7,551 | 23,380 | 24,857 |
Average steel selling price (US$/t) | 1,150 | 1,292 | 1,098 | 1,222 | 945 |
Europe segment crude steel production declined by -
Steel shipments declined by -
Sales in 3Q 2022 decreased by -
Exceptional items for 3Q 2022 of
Operating income in 3Q 2022 significantly declined to
EBITDA in 3Q 2022 of
ACIS14
(USDm) unless otherwise shown | 3Q 22 | 2Q 22 | 3Q 21 | 9M 22 | 9M 21 |
Sales | 1,569 | 1,484 | 2,419 | 5,139 | 7,315 |
Operating (loss) / income | (55) | 43 | 808 | 268 | 2,266 |
Depreciation | (93) | (106) | (112) | (304) | (332) |
EBITDA | 38 | 149 | 920 | 572 | 2,598 |
Crude steel production (kt) | 1,842 | 1,261 | 3,014 | 5,555 | 8,672 |
Steel shipments (kt) | 1,675 | 1,218 | 2,367 | 4,964 | 7,763 |
Average steel selling price (US$/t) | 773 | 925 | 864 | 845 | 770 |
ACIS segment crude steel production in 3Q 2022 was +
One of the three blast furnaces in Ukraine, blast furnace No.6 which is approximately
Steel shipments in 3Q 2022 increased by +
Sales in 3Q 2022 increased by +
Operating loss in 3Q 2022 of
EBITDA of
Mining
(USDm) unless otherwise shown | 3Q 22 | 2Q 22 | 3Q 21 | 9M 22 | 9M 21 |
Sales | 742 | 1,005 | 1,153 | 2,680 | 3,221 |
Operating income | 254 | 463 | 741 | 1,228 | 2,028 |
Depreciation | (57) | (64) | (56) | (177) | (171) |
EBITDA | 311 | 527 | 797 | 1,405 | 2,199 |
Iron ore production (Mt) | 6.9 | 7.3 | 6.8 | 21.1 | 19.0 |
Iron ore shipment (Mt) | 6.9 | 7.5 | 6.9 | 21.1 | 18.9 |
Note: Mining segment comprises iron ore operations of ArcelorMittal Mines Canada and ArcelorMittal Liberia.
Iron ore production decreased in 3Q 2022 by -
Iron ore shipments decreased in 3Q 2022 by -
Operating income in 3Q 2022 was
EBITDA in 3Q 2022 decreased to
Joint ventures
ArcelorMittal has investments in various joint ventures and associate entities globally. The Company considers the Calvert (
Calvert5
(USDm) unless otherwise shown | 3Q 22 | 2Q 22 | 3Q 21 | 9M 22 | 9M 21 |
Production ( | 1,055 | 1,127 | 1,239 | 3,306 | 3,734 |
Steel shipments ( | 1,030 | 1,123 | 1,203 | 3,324 | 3,495 |
EBITDA ( | 2 | 261 | 397 | 590 | 821 |
* Production: all production of the hot strip mill including processing of slabs on a hire work basis for ArcelorMittal group entities and third parties, including stainless steel slabs.
** Shipments: including shipments of finished products processed on a hire work basis for ArcelorMittal group entities and third parties, including stainless steel products.
*** EBITDA of Calvert presented here on a
Calvert’s hot strip mill ("HSM") production during 3Q 2022 decreased by -
Steel shipments in 3Q 2022 were -
EBITDA*** during 3Q 2022 of
AMNS India4
(USDm) unless otherwise shown | 3Q 22 | 2Q 22 | 3Q 21 | 9M 22 | 9M 21 |
Crude steel production ( | 1,663 | 1,668 | 1,891 | 5,061 | 5,546 |
Steel shipments ( | 1,634 | 1,511 | 1,765 | 4,877 | 5,191 |
EBITDA ( | 204 | 365 | 551 | 1,039 | 1,561 |
Crude steel production in 3Q 2022 was stable at 1.7Mt as compared to 2Q 2022 but -
Steel shipments in 3Q 2022 increased by +
EBITDA during 3Q 2022 of
Liquidity and Capital Resources
Net cash provided by operating activities for 3Q 2022 was
Capex in 3Q 2022 amounted to
Net cash used in other investing activities in 3Q 2022 was
Net cash used in financing activities in 3Q 2022 was
Gross debt increased to
As of September 30, 2022, and June 30, 2022, the Company had liquidity of
Capital return
Following the completion of its previously announced share buyback plans (totaling 65.1 million shares in 1H 2022), the Company announced a new share buyback program on July 29, 2022 to purchase a further 60 million shares by the end of May 2023. This is the maximum shares purchasable under current shareholder authorization. Pursuant to this program, the Company repurchased ~31 million shares at a cost of
Outlook
The Company has adapted its capacity for 4Q 2022 to address the weak apparent demand environment and higher energy costs, particularly in Europe. Apparent demand conditions are expected to improve once the current destocking phase reaches maturity. The Company is adapting its cost base during this period of low capacity utilization, optimizing energy consumption and reducing fixed costs of unproductive capacity. At current spot levels, variable costs per tonne (raw materials and energy) are expected to decline in the 4Q 2022, but less than revenue per tonne. Working capital is believed to have peaked, and the unwind expected from 4Q 2022 and into 2023 is expected to support free cash flow.
The Company expects to mitigate some of the fixed costs of idled capacity during 4Q 2022 i.e. utilize economic unemployment support from governments; reduced working hours etc.
Based on the slowing real demand outlook and supply chain destocking, ArcelorMittal expects the following demand by key region:
- In the US, real consumption in 2022 is expected to grow, but a greater impact than previously expected from destocking (particularly in the second half of the year) is forecast to lead to a slight contraction of apparent consumption by up to -
1% ; - In Europe, inflation headwinds are leading to slower (but still positive) real consumption growth in 2022, however the impact of destocking is significant (particularly in the second half of the year) and expected to lead to a contraction of apparent consumption by up to -
7.0% ; - In Brazil, demand is in line with previous expectations, with a slight contraction in real consumption and a significant reduction in inventory forecast (following destocking) to lead to a contraction in apparent consumption by -
10% or more; - In India, apparent consumption in 2022 is forecast to grow between +
7.5% to +8.5% , which is at the upper end of our previous expectations; - In the CIS region (which includes Commonwealth of Independent States and Ukraine), we forecast ASC to contract by up to -
7.0% ; and - In China, the ongoing economic weakness caused by COVID-19 restrictions and the weak construction sector are forecast to lead to a decline in apparent demand of approximately -
3.5% .
ArcelorMittal Condensed Consolidated Statement of Financial Position1
In millions of U.S. dollars | Sept 30, 2022 | Jun 30, 2022 | Dec 31, 2021 |
ASSETS | |||
Cash and cash equivalents | 5,067 | 4,565 | 4,371 |
Trade accounts receivable and other | 4,677 | 5,931 | 5,143 |
Inventories | 20,566 | 23,303 | 19,858 |
Prepaid expenses and other current assets | 6,114 | 7,189 | 5,567 |
Total Current Assets | 36,424 | 40,988 | 34,939 |
Goodwill and intangible assets | 4,035 | 4,307 | 4,425 |
Property, plant and equipment | 28,515 | 29,542 | 30,075 |
Investments in associates and joint ventures | 10,742 | 10,992 | 10,319 |
Deferred tax assets | 8,033 | 7,974 | 8,147 |
Other assets10 | 3,467 | 3,223 | 2,607 |
Total Assets | 91,216 | 97,026 | 90,512 |
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY | |||
Short-term debt and current portion of long-term debt | 2,580 | 2,719 | 1,913 |
Trade accounts payable and other | 13,384 | 16,736 | 15,093 |
Accrued expenses and other current liabilities | 6,556 | 6,514 | 7,161 |
Total Current Liabilities | 22,520 | 25,969 | 24,167 |
Long-term debt, net of current portion | 6,414 | 6,069 | 6,488 |
Deferred tax liabilities | 2,394 | 2,489 | 2,369 |
Other long-term liabilities | 5,971 | 6,053 | 6,144 |
Total Liabilities | 37,299 | 40,580 | 39,168 |
Equity attributable to the equity holders of the parent | 51,563 | 53,992 | 49,106 |
Non-controlling interests | 2,354 | 2,454 | 2,238 |
Total Equity | 53,917 | 56,446 | 51,344 |
Total Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity | 91,216 | 97,026 | 90,512 |
ArcelorMittal Condensed Consolidated Statement of Operations1
Three months ended | Nine months ended | ||||
In millions of U.S. dollars unless otherwise shown | Sept 30, 2022 | Jun 30, 2022 | Sept 30, 2021 | Sept 30, 2022 | Sept 30, 2021 |
Sales | 18,975 | 22,142 | 20,229 | 62,953 | 55,765 |
Depreciation (B) | (628) | (669) | (590) | (1,944) | (1,811) |
Exceptional items (B) | (381) | — | (123) | (381) | (123) |
Operating income (A) | 1,651 | 4,494 | 5,345 | 10,578 | 12,418 |
Operating margin % | 8.7 % | 20.3 % | 26.4 % | 16.8 % | 22.3 % |
Income from associates, joint ventures and other investments | 59 | 578 | 778 | 1,196 | 1,821 |
Net interest expense | (37) | (53) | (62) | (141) | (229) |
Foreign exchange and other net financing (loss) | (247) | (183) | (339) | (570) | (766) |
Income before taxes and non-controlling interests | 1,426 | 4,836 | 5,722 | 11,063 | 13,244 |
Current tax expense | (394) | (900) | (938) | (1,989) | (2,275) |
Deferred tax benefit | 23 | 74 | 56 | 237 | 447 |
Income tax expense (net) | (371) | (826) | (882) | (1,752) | (1,828) |
Income including non-controlling interests | 1,055 | 4,010 | 4,840 | 9,311 | 11,416 |
Non-controlling interests income | (62) | (87) | (219) | (270) | (505) |
Net income attributable to equity holders of the parent | 993 | 3,923 | 4,621 | 9,041 | 10,911 |
Basic earnings per common share ($) | 1.11 | 4.25 | 4.17 | 9.76 | 9.52 |
Diluted earnings per common share ($) | 1.11 | 4.24 | 4.16 | 9.73 | 9.49 |
Weighted average common shares outstanding (in millions) | 892 | 924 | 1,109 | 926 | 1,147 |
Diluted weighted average common shares outstanding (in millions) | 895 | 926 | 1,112 | 929 | 1,150 |
OTHER INFORMATION | |||||
EBITDA (C = A-B) | 2,660 | 5,163 | 6,058 | 12,903 | 14,352 |
EBITDA Margin % | 14.0 % | 23.3 % | 29.9 % | 20.5 % | 25.7 % |
Total group iron ore production (Mt) | 10.6 | 12.0 | 13.0 | 34.6 | 37.5 |
Crude steel production (Mt) | 14.9 | 14.6 | 17.2 | 45.8 | 52.6 |
Steel shipments (Mt) | 13.6 | 14.4 | 14.6 | 43.3 | 47.2 |
ArcelorMittal Condensed Consolidated Statement of Cash flows1
Three months ended | Nine months ended | ||||
In millions of U.S. dollars | Sept 30, 2022 | Jun 30, 2022 | Sept 30, 2021 | Sept 30, 2022 | Sept 30, 2021 |
Operating activities: | |||||
Income attributable to equity holders of the parent | 993 | 3,923 | 4,621 | 9,041 | 10,911 |
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operations: | |||||
Non-controlling interests income | 62 | 87 | 219 | 270 | 505 |
Depreciation | 628 | 669 | 590 | 1,944 | 1,811 |
Exceptional items | 381 | — | 123 | 381 | 123 |
Income from associates, joint ventures and other investments | (59) | (578) | (778) | (1,196) | (1,821) |
Deferred tax benefit | (23) | (74) | (56) | (237) | (447) |
Change in working capital | (580) | (1,008) | (2,896) | (3,635) | (6,431) |
Other operating activities (net) | 579 | (465) | 619 | 1 | 1,100 |
Net cash provided by operating activities (A) | 1,981 | 2,554 | 2,442 | 6,569 | 5,751 |
Investing activities: | |||||
Purchase of property, plant and equipment and intangibles (B) | (784) | (655) | (675) | (1,968) | (1,863) |
Other investing activities (net) | (19) | (886) | 1,184 | (982) | 2,758 |
Net cash (used in) / provided by investing activities | (803) | (1,541) | 509 | (2,950) | 895 |
Financing activities: | |||||
Net proceeds / (payments) relating to payable to banks and long-term debt | 592 | 389 | (806) | 1,360 | (3,662) |
Dividends paid to ArcelorMittal shareholders | — | (332) | (28) | (332) | (312) |
Dividends paid to minorities (C) | (124) | (166) | (157) | (302) | (239) |
Share buyback | (649) | (1,496) | (1,703) | (2,649) | (3,350) |
Lease payments and other financing activities (net) | (38) | (46) | (46) | (132) | (345) |
Net cash used in financing activities | (219) | (1,651) | (2,740) | (2,055) | (7,908) |
Net increase / (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents | 959 | (638) | 211 | 1,564 | (1,262) |
Cash and cash equivalents transferred from assets held for sale | — | — | — | — | 3 |
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash | (451) | (367) | (9) | (814) | (68) |
Change in cash and cash equivalents | 508 | (1,005) | 202 | 750 | (1,327) |
Free cash flow (D=A+B+C) | 1,073 | 1,733 | 1,610 | 4,299 | 3,649 |
Appendix 1: Product shipments by region1,2
(000'kt) | 3Q 22 | 2Q 22 | 3Q 21 | 9M 22 | 9M 21 |
Flat | 1,743 | 1,800 | 1,613 | 5,354 | 5,331 |
Long | 676 | 748 | 770 | 2,081 | 2,349 |
NAFTA | 2,339 | 2,453 | 2,280 | 7,248 | 7,381 |
Flat | 1,519 | 1,643 | 1,523 | 4,909 | 4,635 |
Long | 1,345 | 1,380 | 1,325 | 4,034 | 4,076 |
Brazil | 2,837 | 3,003 | 2,829 | 8,877 | 8,661 |
Flat | 4,978 | 5,705 | 5,333 | 16,636 | 17,697 |
Long | 1,967 | 2,146 | 2,121 | 6,388 | 6,815 |
Europe | 7,079 | 7,967 | 7,551 | 23,380 | 24,857 |
CIS | 1,170 | 730 | 1,684 | 3,305 | 5,816 |
Africa | 503 | 492 | 679 | 1,662 | 1,942 |
ACIS | 1,675 | 1,218 | 2,367 | 4,964 | 7,763 |
Note: “Others and eliminations” are not presented in the table
Appendix 2: Capital expenditures1,2
(USDm) | 3Q 22 | 2Q 22 | 3Q 21 | 9M 22 | 9M 21 |
NAFTA | 97 | 115 | 118 | 299 | 265 |
Brazil | 154 | 123 | 102 | 367 | 241 |
Europe | 242 | 211 | 231 | 640 | 809 |
ACIS | 135 | 107 | 139 | 332 | 353 |
Mining | 128 | 92 | 78 | 290 | 175 |
Total | 784 | 655 | 675 | 1,968 | 1,863 |
Note: “Others” are not presented in the table
Appendix 3: Debt repayment schedule as of September 30, 2022
(USD billion) | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | 2026 | >2026 | Total |
Bonds | — | 1.1 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 1.0 | 1.7 | 5.5 |
Commercial paper | 0.9 | — | — | — | — | — | 0.9 |
Other loans | 0.4 | 0.3 | 0.2 | 0.6 | 0.1 | 1.0 | 2.6 |
Total gross debt | 1.3 | 1.4 | 1.0 | 1.5 | 1.1 | 2.7 | 9.0 |
Appendix 4: Reconciliation of gross debt to net debt
(USD million) | Sept 30, 2022 | Jun 30, 2022 | Dec 31, 2021 |
Gross debt | 8,994 | 8,788 | 8,401 |
Less: Cash and cash equivalents | (5,067) | (4,565) | (4,371) |
Net debt | 3,927 | 4,223 | 4,030 |
Net debt / LTM EBITDA | 0.2 | 0.2 | 0.2 |
Appendix 5: Terms and definitions
Unless indicated otherwise, or the context otherwise requires, references in this earnings release to the following terms have the meanings set out next to them below:
Apparent steel consumption: calculated as the sum of production plus imports minus exports.
Average steel selling prices: calculated as steel sales divided by steel shipments.
Cash and cash equivalents: represents cash and cash equivalents, restricted cash, and short-term investments.
Capex: represents the purchase of property, plant and equipment and intangibles.
Crude steel production: steel in the first solid state after melting, suitable for further processing or for sale.
Depreciation: refers to amortization and depreciation.
EPS: refers to basic or diluted earnings per share.
EBITDA: operating results plus depreciation and exceptional items.
EBITDA/tonne: calculated as EBITDA divided by total steel shipments.
Exceptional items: income / (charges) relate to transactions that are significant, infrequent or unusual and are not representative of the normal course of business of the period.
Foreign exchange and other net financing income / (loss): include foreign currency exchange impact, bank fees, interest on pensions, impairment of financial assets, revaluation of derivative instruments and other charges that cannot be directly linked to operating results.
Free cash flow (FCF): refers to net cash provided by operating activities less capex less dividends paid to minority shareholders
Gross debt: long-term debt and short-term debt.
Iron ore reference prices: refers to iron ore prices for
Kt: refers to thousand metric tonnes.
Liquidity: cash and cash equivalents plus available credit lines excluding back-up lines for the commercial paper program.
LTIF: lost time injury frequency rate equals lost time injuries per 1,000,000 worked hours, based on own personnel and contractors.
Mt: refers to million metric tonnes.
Net debt: long-term debt and short-term debt less cash and cash equivalents.
Net debt/LTM EBITDA: refers to Net debt divided by EBITDA.
Net interest expense: includes interest expense less interest income
Operating results: refers to operating income/(loss).
Operating segments: NAFTA segment includes the Flat, Long and Tubular operations of Canada, Mexico; and also includes all Mexico mines. The Brazil segment includes the Flat, Long and Tubular operations of Brazil and its neighboring countries including Argentina, Costa Rica, Venezuela; and also includes Andrade and Serra Azul captive iron ore mines. The Europe segment includes the Flat, Long and Tubular operations of the European business, as well as Downstream Solutions, and also includes Bosnia and Herzegovina captive iron ore mines. The ACIS segment includes the Flat, Long and Tubular operations of Kazakhstan, Ukraine and South Africa; and also includes the captive iron ore mines in Ukraine and iron ore and coal mines in Kazakhstan. Mining segment includes iron ore operations of ArcelorMittal Mines Canada and ArcelorMittal Liberia.
Own iron ore production: includes total of all finished production of fines, concentrate, pellets and lumps and includes share of production.
Price-cost effect: a lack of correlation or a lag in the corollary relationship between raw material and steel prices, which can either have a positive (i.e., increased spread between steel prices and raw material costs) or negative effect (i.e., a squeeze or decreased spread between steel prices and raw material costs).
Shipments: information at segment and group level eliminates intra-segment shipments (which are primarily between Flat/Long plants and Tubular plants) and inter-segment shipments respectively. Shipments of Downstream Solutions are excluded.
STIP: refers to short term incentive plan.
LTIP: refers to long term incentive plan.
Working capital change (working capital investment / release): Movement of change in working capital - trade accounts receivable plus inventories less trade and other accounts payable.
Footnotes
- The financial information in this press release has been prepared consistently with International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (“IASB”) and as adopted by the European Union. The interim financial information included in this announcement has also been prepared in accordance with IFRS applicable to interim periods, however this announcement does not contain sufficient information to constitute an interim financial report as defined in International Accounting Standard 34, “Interim Financial Reporting”. The numbers in this press release have not been audited. The financial information and certain other information presented in a number of tables in this press release have been rounded to the nearest whole number or the nearest decimal. Therefore, the sum of the numbers in a column may not conform exactly to the total figure given for that column. In addition, certain percentages presented in the tables in this press release reflect calculations based upon the underlying information prior to rounding and, accordingly, may not conform exactly to the percentages that would be derived if the relevant calculations were based upon the rounded numbers. Segment information presented in this press release is prior to inter-segment eliminations and certain adjustments made to operating result of the segments to reflect corporate costs, income from non-steel operations (e.g., logistics and shipping services) and the elimination of stock margins between the segments. This press release also includes certain non-GAAP financial/alternative performance measures. ArcelorMittal presents EBITDA and EBITDA/tonne, free cash flow (FCF) and ratio of net debt/EBITDA which are non-GAAP financial/alternative performance measures, as additional measures to enhance the understanding of its operating performance; ArcelorMittal also presents Equity book value per share and ROE as shown in footnotes to this press release. ArcelorMittal believes such indicators are relevant to provide management and investors with additional information. ArcelorMittal also presents net debt and change in working capital as additional measures to enhance the understanding of its financial position, changes to its capital structure and its credit assessment. Non-GAAP financial/alternative performance measures should be read in conjunction with, and not as an alternative for, ArcelorMittal's financial information prepared in accordance with IFRS.
- Effective 2Q 2021, ArcelorMittal retrospectively amended its presentation of reportable segments. The results of each mine are accounted for within the steel segment that it primarily supplies. Summary of changes: NAFTA: all Mexico mines; Brazil: Andrade and Serra Azul mines; Europe: ArcelorMittal Prijedor mine (Bosnia and Herzegovina); ACIS: Kazakhstan and Ukraine mines; and Mining: only AMMC and Liberia iron ore mines.
- LTIF figures presented for 3Q 2022 of 0.54x, 2Q 2022 of 0.67x, 3Q 2021 of 0.76x, 9M 2022 of 0.63x and 9M 2021 of 0.80x exclude ArcelorMittal Italia (which was deconsolidated as from 2Q 2021 onwards).
- AMNS India is debottlenecking its operations (steel shop and rolling parts) to achieve capacity of 8.6Mt per annum by the end of 2024. AMNS India medium-term plans are to expand and grow initially to ~15Mt by early 2026 in Hazira (phase 1A) including automotive downstream and enhancements to iron ore operations, with estimated capex of ~
$7.4 billion (for$0.8 billion for debottlenecking,$1.0 billion for downstream projects and$5.6 billion for upstream projects. Phase 1A plans include a CRM2 complex and galvanizing and annealing line, 2 blast furnaces, steel shop, HSM, ancillary equipment (including coke, sinter, networks, power, gas, oxygen plant etc.); and raw material handling. Start of BF2 expected in 2025 and BF3 in 2026. BF1 net capacity increase from 2Mtpa to 3Mtpa. There are further options to potentially grow to 20Mt per annum (Phase 1B). AMNS India has agreed to acquire port, power and other logistics and infrastructure assets in India from the Essar Group for a net value of ~$2.4b n. AMNS India has completed part of the power closing transaction on October 19, 2022 ($0.4 billion ) whilst the remaining transaction closing is subject to the completion of certain corporate and regulatory approvals. In March 2021, AMNS India signed a Memorandum of Understanding ("MoU") with the Government of Odisha in view of building an integrated steel plant with a 12Mtpa capacity in Kendrapara district of state Odisha. A pre-feasibility study report was submitted to the state government in 3Q 2021, and AMNS India is currently engaging with the government for further studies and clearances. Further options to build a 6Mtpa integrated steel plant are being assessed. The Thakurani mine is operating at full 5.5Mtpa capacity since 1Q 2021, while the second Odisha pellet plant was commissioned and started in September 2021, adding 6Mtpa for a total 20Mtpa of pellet capacity. In addition, in September 2021, AMNS India commenced operations at Ghoraburhani - Sagasahi iron ore mine in Odisha. The mine is set to gradually ramp up production to a rated capacity of 7.2Mtpa and contribute significantly to meeting AMNS India’s long-term raw material requirements. - AMNS Calvert ("Calvert") has plans to construct a new 1.5Mt EAF and caster is expected to be completed in 2023. The joint venture is to invest
$775 million . Option to add a further 1.5Mt EAF at lower capex intensity is being studied. - ArcelorMittal Mines Canada, otherwise known as ArcelorMittal Mines and Infrastructure Canada.
- On December 19, 2018, ArcelorMittal signed a
$5.5 billion Revolving Credit Facility, with a five-year maturity plus two one-year extension options. During the fourth quarter of 2019, ArcelorMittal executed the option to extend the facility to December 19, 2024. The extension was completed for$5.4 billion of the available amount, with the remaining$0.1 billion remaining with a maturity of December 19, 2023. In December 2020, ArcelorMittal executed the second option to extend the facility, and the new maturity is now extended to December 19, 2025. On April 30, 2021, ArcelorMittal amended its$5.5 billion RCF to align with its sustainability and climate action strategy. As of September 30, 2022, the$5.5 billion revolving credit facility was fully available. - XCarb™ is designed to bring together all of ArcelorMittal’s reduced, low and zero-carbon products and steelmaking activities, as well as wider initiatives and green innovation projects, into a single effort focused on achieving demonstrable progress towards carbon neutral steel. Alongside the new XCarb™ brand, we have launched three XCarb™ initiatives: the XCarb™ innovation fund, XCarb™ green steel certificates and XCarb™ recycled and renewably produced for products made via the Electric Arc Furnace route using scrap. The Company is offering green steel using a system of certificates (XCarb® green certificates). These will be issued by an independent auditor to certify tonnes of CO2 savings achieved through the Company’s investment in decarbonization technologies in Europe. Net-zero equivalence is determined by assigning CO2 savings certificates equivalent to CO2 per tonne of steel produced in 2018 as the reference. The certificates will relate to the tonnes of CO2 saved in total, as a direct result of the decarbonization projects being implemented across a number of its European sites.
- In addition to the AMNS India and Calvert joint ventures, the Company has important investments in China that provide valuable dividend streams and growth optionality. VAMA, our 50:50 joint venture with Hunan Valin, is a state-of-the-art facility focused on rolling steel for high-demanding applications in particular automotive. The business is performing well and plans to expand the current capacity by
40% to 2Mtpa over the next 2 years, financed from its own resources. The investment will allow VAMA to broaden its product portfolio and further enhance its competitiveness. This will in turn enable VAMA to meet the growing demand of high value add solutions from the Chinese automotive / new energy vehicle (NEV) market and propel it to be among the top automotive steel players in China by 2025. ArcelorMittal also owns a37% interest in China Oriental, one of the largest H-Beam producers in China which has recently upgraded its asset portfolio and benefits from a strong balance sheet position. - Other assets include the main listed investment of Erdemir (
12% ) at market value of$660 million ,$688 million and$885 million as of September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022, and December 31, 2021, respectively. - Segment “Other & eliminations”, EBITDA result was an income of
$87 million in 3Q 2022, as compared to a loss of$84 million in 2Q 2022 principally due to the decrease of the stock margin eliminations driven by the decrease during the quarter of the iron ore market price on intra-group stock sales between steel and mining businesses. - Equity book value per share is calculated as the Equity attributable to the equity holders of the parent divided by diluted number of shares at the end of the period. 3Q 2022 total equity of
$51.6 billion divided by 873 million diluted shares outstanding equals$59 /sh. 2Q 2022 total equity of$54.0 billion divided by 904 million diluted shares outstanding equals$60 /sh. - Previously announced (to be updated at the full year 2022 results in February 2023) strategic capex envelope of
$3.65 billion represents total to be spent on strategic projects in the period from 2021 to 2024. Specifically,$0.5 billion of the$3.65 billion has been spent through September 30, 2022. The full year 2022 capex guidance of$3.5 billion has been reduced by$0.7 billion from the previous guidance of$4.2 billion to reflect some moderate delays to certain strategic ($0.4 billion ) and decarbonization ($0.1 billion ) spending plans due to project mobilization/contractors which are now accelerating. - Blast furnace No.6 (approximately
20% of total Kryvyi Rih capacity), was restarted on April 11, 2022 (to resume low levels of pig iron production). Iron ore production was temporarily suspended in 3Q 2022 (from ~55% capacity run rate in 2Q 2022). Iron ore production in Ukraine has restarted in early October 2022 at ~25% level. - ROE refers to "Return on Equity" which is calculated as trailing twelve-month net income attributable to equity holders of the parent divided by the average equity attributable to the equity holders of the parent over the period. 3Q 2022 ROE of
26% ($13.1 billion /$51.1 billion ). 2Q 2022 ROE of34% ($16.7 billion /$49.6 billion ). - On March 30, 2022 Votorantim exercised the put option right it has under its shareholders’ agreement with the Company to sell its entire equity interest in ArcelorMittal Brasil to the Company, following the acquisition of Votorantim S.A.'s long steel business in Brazil in 2018, which became a wholly-owned subsidiary of ArcelorMittal Brasil. The exercise price is calculated pursuant to an agreed formula in the shareholders’ agreement which applies a 6x multiple of ArcelorMittal Brasil Longs Business EBITDA in the four immediately preceding calendar quarters from the date of the put option exercise (subject to certain adjustments, such as the exclusion of any unusual, infrequent or abnormal events) less an assumed net debt of BRL 6.2 billion times
15% . ArcelorMittal Brasil calculated the put option exercise price in the amount of$0.2 billion . Votorantim S.A. has indicated that it does not agree with ArcelorMittal Brasil’s calculation of the exercise price and filed a request for arbitration on September 28, 2022. - Following a favorable and unappealable decision issued in May 2022 with respect to taxpayers’ right to register the Pis/Cofins credits over scrap purchases, ArcelorMittal Brasil recorded a gain in the amount of
$0.2 billion for the previous periods. - The Company has introduced a
50% increase in the short term incentive plan (STIP) link to safety performance (with fatalities acting as a circuit breaker); increased the safety target in STIP to15% and long term incentive plan (LTIP) to10% ; and included ESG objectives in LTIP. - On October 13, 2022, ArcelorMittal together with the governments of Canada and Ontario, broke ground on its CAD
$1.8 billion investment decarbonization project at the ArcelorMittal Dofasco plant in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The governments of Canada and Ontario having committed CAD$400 million and CAD$500 million respectively to the overall project cost. The project will fundamentally change the way steel is made at ArcelorMittal Dofasco, transitioning the site to direct reduced iron-electric arc furnace steelmaking, which carries a considerably lower carbon footprint and removes coal from the ironmaking process. The new 2.5Mt capacity DRI furnace will initially operate on natural gas but will be constructed ‘hydrogen ready’ so it can transition to green hydrogen when a sufficient and cost-effective supply becomes available. The first onsite construction work will begin in January 2023. Construction on the new assets is currently expected to be completed in 2026, at which point a 12-18 month transition phase will begin with both steelmaking streams (BF-BOF and DRI-EAF) active. The transition is expected to be completed by 2028. In addition to the new DRI facility, the project also involves the construction of an EAF capable of producing 2.4 million tonnes of high-quality steel through ArcelorMittal Dofasco’s existing casting, rolling and finishing facilities. Modification of ArcelorMittal Dofasco’s existing EAF facility and continuous casters will also be undertaken to align productivity, quality and energy capabilities between all assets in the new footprint. - September 30, 2020 was the inception date of the recent share buyback programs.
- In early November 2022, ArcelorMittal announced that it is preparing to reduce its activity at the Fos-sur-Mer site due to the slowdown in steel demand and the impact of energy prices. The Company expects a temporary shutdown of one of the site's two blast furnaces as of December 2022.
Third quarter 2022 earnings analyst conference call
ArcelorMittal management will host a conference call for members of the investment community to present and comment on the three-month and nine-month period ended September 30, 2022 on: Thursday November 10, 2022 at 9.30am US Eastern time; 14.30pm London time and 15.30pm CET.
The dial in numbers are: | ||||
Location | Toll free dial in numbers | Local dial in numbers | Participant | |
UK local: | 0808 238 0676 | +44 (0)203 057 6900 | 7995055# | |
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France: | 0805 101 469 | +33 1 7070 6079 | 7995055# | |
Germany: | 0800 588 9185 | +49 69 2222 2624 | 7995055# | |
Spain: | 900 828 532 | +34 914 144 464 | 7995055# | |
Luxembourg: | 800 23 023 | +352 2786 0311 | 7995055# |
Join the call via telephone using the participant code 7995055# or alternatively use the live audio webcast link.
https://interface.eviscomedia.com/player/1148/
Please visit the results section on our website to listen to the reply once the event has finished https://corporate.arcelormittal.com/investors/results
Forward-Looking Statements
This document may contain forward-looking information and statements about ArcelorMittal and its subsidiaries. These statements include financial projections and estimates and their underlying assumptions, statements regarding plans, objectives and expectations with respect to future operations, products and services, and statements regarding future performance. Forward-looking statements may be identified by the words “believe”, “expect”, “anticipate”, “target” or similar expressions. Although ArcelorMittal’s management believes that the expectations reflected in such forward-looking statements are reasonable, investors and holders of ArcelorMittal’s securities are cautioned that forward-looking information and statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, many of which are difficult to predict and generally beyond the control of ArcelorMittal, that could cause actual results and developments to differ materially and adversely from those expressed in, or implied or projected by, the forward-looking information and statements. These risks and uncertainties include those discussed or identified in the filings with the Luxembourg Stock Market Authority for the Financial Markets (Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier) and the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) made or to be made by ArcelorMittal, including ArcelorMittal’s latest Annual Report on Form 20-F on file with the SEC. ArcelorMittal undertakes no obligation to publicly update its forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.
About ArcelorMittal
ArcelorMittal is one of the world's leading steel and mining company, with a presence in 60 countries and primary steelmaking facilities in 16 countries. In 2021, ArcelorMittal had revenues of
Our goal is to help build a better world with smarter steels. Steels made using innovative processes which use less energy, emit significantly less carbon and reduce costs. Steels that are cleaner, stronger and reusable. Steels for electric vehicles and renewable energy infrastructure that will support societies as they transform through this century. With steel at our core, our inventive people and an entrepreneurial culture at heart, we will support the world in making that change. This is what we believe it takes to be the steel company of the future.
ArcelorMittal is listed on the stock exchanges of New York (MT), Amsterdam (MT), Paris (MT), Luxembourg (MT) and on the Spanish stock exchanges of Barcelona, Bilbao, Madrid and Valencia (MTS). For more information about ArcelorMittal please visit: http://corporate.arcelormittal.com/
Enquiries
ArcelorMittal investor relations: +44 207 543 1128; Retail: +44 207 543 1156; SRI: +44 207 543 1156 and Bonds/credit: +33 1 71 92 10 26.
ArcelorMittal corporate communications (E-mail: press@arcelormittal.com) +44 207 629 7988. Contact: Paul Weigh +44 203 214 2419.
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