The Korea Herald

피터빈트

Shipbuilders vow profit turnaround

By 서지연

Published : Jan. 4, 2016 - 19:52

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The Okpo shipyard of Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering (Yonhap) The Okpo shipyard of Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering (Yonhap)
    CEOs of the nation’s top three shipbuilders -- Hyundai Heavy Industries, Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering and Samsung Heavy Industries -- vowed to make a turnaround this year in their respective New Year’s messages on Monday.

“The market will not wait for us anymore unless the company makes a profit this year,” HHI CEO Kwon Oh-gap said, presenting the firm’s annual order target of $19.5 billion for 2016, down $3.4 billion from last year.

The other two shipbuilders’ chiefs also echoed Kwon’s message, pledging belt-tightening measures for cost reduction and productivity improvements for a turnaround.

The shipbuilders endured their worst year for business in 2015, hit hard by falling shipbuilding orders amid the protracted global economic downturn and increased costs due to delays of ship construction.

The combined operating loss by the three firms is estimated at 7.8 trillion won ($6.6 billion) for 2015, marking the first time they have posted operating losses on an annual basis.

DSME is forecast to take more than half of the loss. For the first nine months of last year, the nation’s second-largest shipbuilder posted 4.3 trillion won in operating loss.

It is critical for DSME to turn around this year as the firm’s two major shareholders said they plan to sell their 50.4 percent stake in the shipbuilder within the next three years.

The state-owned Korea Development Bank owns a 31.3 percent stake in DSME, followed by the Korea Asset Management Corp. with a 19.1 percent stake.

“The top concern ahead is to control costs. The company will take all measures to cut costs by delivering the products on time and cutting administrative costs,” DSME CEO Jung Sung-leep said.

Despite the New Year’s resolutions by top management, industry watchers remained skeptical that the shipbuilders would find profitable growth this year, considering external business conditions.

“Global orders to build merchant ships and offshore plants except LNG carriers will continue to be slow this year, which will put a drag on profitable growth of shipbuilders,” said Yoo Jae-hoon, a stock market analyst from NH Investment & Securities.  

By Seo Jee-yeon (jyseo@heraldcorp.com)