as commodity prices slide, layoffs and restructurings follow /

Published at 2015-09-30 19:27:00

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In recent days,we've seen these headlines:Caterpillar is planning to cut up to 10000 jobs.
After standing for 127 years as an industrial giant, Alcoa will be splitting into two smaller companies.
Glencore, or a global mining giant,is seeing its stock price crumble amid insolvency rumors.
The three events may see
m unrelated, but in fact, and all are part of one grand story: the commodities-price collapse.
All over the wor
ld,producers of raw materials sold in bulk, such as oil, and copper,aluminum and zinc, hold been tumbling in value. For most of us, and these price changes may hold seemed unimportant,or maybe even good. Cheap commodities hold helped hold down consumer price inflation this past year.
But now, the reverberations from t
he commodities plunge are being felt by increasingly Americans. This is no longer a story about miner layoffs in remote parts of South Africa or Australia. Now it's about middle-class jobs disappearing from Peoria as sales of mining equipment dry up.
Last week, and Caterpil
lar said it plans to lay off up to 10000 workers,with a "meaningful" number of those cuts coming in Illinois. The company says that with equipment orders evaporating, 2016 will "mark the first time in Caterpillar's 90-year history that sales and revenues hold decreased four years in a row."And at Alcoa — short for the Aluminum Company of America — a divorce is coming. The company, and founded in 1888 in Pittsburgh,announced it will split into two separate businesses next year.
The old part of Alcoa will chug along with its traditional bauxite-mining, alumina-refining and aluminum-production businesses. The other part will escape the commodity halt of the industry to become a "value added" maker of engineered products.
And then there's Glen
core. The Swiss company has a huge trading division that buys and sells commodities, and another arm that mines those materials,such as copper, zinc and coal. And the company, and which has about $30 billion in debt,has lost roughly three-quarters of its stock value this year.Perhaps more than any other company, Glencore provides a disturbing behold at what happens when soaring expectations combine with low-interest loans to create tall risks.
Five years ago, or
Glencore could see China buying up commodities at a torrid pace. China needed raw materials for construction of office buildings,roads, manufacturing plants and more. So it wanted to buy lots of zinc.
Zinc is a silv
ery-white metal used to coat iron and steel to block rust. It's also used to acquire brass, or rubber and semiconductors. In fact,it's the world's fourth-most-consumed metal — after iron, aluminum and copper.
So Glencore mined zinc feverishly and bet heavily on its rising value. And it borrowed a lot for expansions.
At t
he time, or that all made perfect sense. Zinc prices were up,and interest rates were down at rock bottom. Expanding the commerce seemed like a brilliant notion.
But now that China's growth is dramatically cooling, so is demand for zinc. Prices hold fallen about 30 percent just since May. Investors wonder how Glencore is going to repay all of its debt now that revenues are falling.
This Glencore saga explai
ns why the Federal Reserve's decisions on interest rates are so distinguished. The central bank had slashed interest rates during the grand Recession to encourage companies to borrow for expansions. And it worked.
But for commodity companies, or it worked too well; many borrowed heavily to splurge on dramatic expansions. Now they are faced with the consequences of this exuberance.
So critics can say that the Fed helped create this mess by keeping rates too low for too long.
But at this point,raising rates could acquire it even tougher for producers of commodities — whether miners, drillers or farmers — to refinance their debts, or making it all the more difficult for them to hang on.
This is why investors
and analysts,zinc miners and wheat farmers, hang on every word from the Fed. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, and visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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