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FACTBOX-Corporate Australia burdened by Omicron surge

by Reuters
Monday, 24 January 2022 02:54 GMT

(Adds Fortescue, South32, Korvest; updates Qantas)

Jan 24 (Reuters) - Australia has seen a record surge in COVID-19 infections due to the Omicron variant, which has strained supply chains, overwhelmed hospitals, and clouded the outlook of firms that were just recovering from the impact of the Delta outbreak.

Companies have had to shelve plans to ramp up their business, flag a hit to earnings, or earmark additional costs, as Omicron has thrown a spanner in the works of businesses that sought a brighter outlook for 2022.

Here is a list of companies that have a warned of a hit from the outbreak:

South32

The diversified miner cut its annual manganese ore output outlook from Australia, partly due to labour constraints, and said additional COVID-19 curbs in New South Wales could further impact labour availability in the first-half of 2022.

Fortescue

The world's fourth-largest iron ore miner warned a delay by Western Australia state in reopening its borders due to a surge in Omicron infections may worsen a labour shortage currently affecting the mining sector.

Korvest

The industrial equipment maker said it experienced workforce disruptions in January as workers were required to isolate due to rising COVID-19 cases.

Whitehaven Coal

Australia's biggest independent coal miner cut its 2022 managed run-of-mine coal production forecast, partly due to pandemic-led labour shortages. It said Omicron was hurting production in the country and there was material uncertainty about how much more impact COVID-19 would have.

Mount Gibson Iron

The iron ore miner said travel restrictions, particularly inter-state border closures and quarantine restrictions for certain fly-in-fly-out workers, had limited the availability of skilled personnel, which continued to significantly challenge its operations.

BHP

The global miner said 2022 copper production will be towards the lower end of its forecast and cut its annual metallurgical coal output outlook, partly due to labour constraints from COVID-19. The company expects workforce absenteeism because of the Omicron variant to continue into the early part of the second half of 2022.

Rio Tinto

The world's largest iron ore miner forecast weaker-than-expected 2022 iron ore shipments, as prolonged COVID-19 disruptions led to labour shortages and production delays from the new greenfields mine at the Gudai-Darri project.

Wesfarmers

The retail conglomerate said rising Omicron cases had led to weaker trading conditions over Christmas and subdued traffic to its stores in the first half of January, while also disrupting its supply chain and stock availability as employees at its distribution centres missed work due to COVID-19.

Qantas Airways

The airline, which earlier reduced about a third of its planned domestic and international capacity for the March quarter, cut its domestic capacity further after Western Australia delayed opening its border.

Virgin Australia

The airline said it would reduce capacity across its network by around 25% for part of January and for February due to reduced travel demand and staff being required to isolate.

Bega Cheese

The cheese maker issued a profit warning and said the impact from COVID-19 had been "extensive and significant".

Inghams Group

The poultry producer said the rapid spread of Omicron was partly responsible for impacting supply chain and operations, and that staff shortages due to COVID-19 were hurting its production volume. (Compiled by Indranil Sarkar and Shashwat Awasthi; Edited by Shounak Dasgupta)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.


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