Roy Harvey
Analyst · BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead
Thanks Bill. In our markets, we expect bauxite will remain in surplus this year. China is importing and stockpiling additional bauxite from Guinea and Southeast Asia due to dwindling supply in the country and to de-risk the long complicated import supply chains involved. Bauxite depletion in China will likely persist, suggesting that Chinese refiners will need to seek additional sources of bauxite outside their country. In the alumina market, we continue to expect a slight 2019 surplus, driven by the restart of the Alunorte refinery in Brazil and lower alumina demand due to an overall decrease in worldwide smelting operations. This surplus is partially offset by environmental related reductions in China and India. We saw a series of alumina curtailments due to bauxite supply concerns in China and the mismanagement of bauxite residue in both China and India. In China specifically, the government forced three separate refineries in Shaanxi province to curtail due to environmental related issues with bauxite residue. We also saw news this past quarter about refinery upgrades implemented to meet the emission standards. At the same time, some Chinese inland refineries cut production due to difficulties sourcing appropriate bauxite, because of depleted domestic sources. Those refineries were unable to immediately replace that bauxite from seaborne sources. Taken altogether, environmental concerns in India and China removed almost 2 million metric tons production from our 2019 balance. Considering all these developments, it remains clear the operating in an environmentally sustainable way is a key to success. At Alcoa, we strive to be leaders in environmental, health and safety practices, which gives us our license to operate and makes us a partner of choice in the industry. Finally in aluminum, we continue to project a global deficit. While we still see growing global demand, trade tensions, macroeconomic headwinds and a slowdown in global manufacturing has informed our lower demand projection. We expect these headwinds will likely result in slower growth in aluminum end-use sectors this year particularly in the global automotive sector. While not in our base outlook, ongoing trade talks, central bank policy decisions and Chinese stimulus measures provide room for optimism and our potential swing factors for aluminum demand both this year and next. Our 2019 outlook for aluminum supply on the other hand is tighter, as the postponement of smelter projects in China in the recent curtailment of a Boston and smelter will outweigh the impact of the planned restart of ABI smelter in Bécancour, Quebec which is beginning later this month and will continue into the second quarter of 2020. In China, authorities continue to enforce the national permitting policy for smelters which by law caps total aluminum smelting capacity. As a result, China's aluminum supply growth for 2019 is estimated at less than 250,000 tons equivalent to a growth rate of less than 1%, that is one of the lowest Chinese year-on-year growth figures in both percentage and absolute volume terms since 2000. With a sustained aluminum deficit forecast, we continue to expect lower global inventories. Aluminum inventories measured in days of consumption continue to decline and are expected by year's end to reach levels not seen in more than a decade since before the global financial crisis in 2008. Because of demand growth and falling stocks, we estimate the inventories in days of consumption terms will have steadily decreased from a peak of 119 days in 2009 to an estimated 56 to 59 days at the end of 2019. In the longer-term, demand in key end-use sectors such as transportation, construction and packaging is expected to grow steadily over the next decade. Aluminum will continue to help the global economy to meet its energy efficiency in general sustainability objectives. As inventories continue to be consumed in this deficit market, we are optimistic about the future of aluminum, its supply chain, and Alcoa's role in this industry. Turning to our operations. Over the course of the last quarter, we remained focused on strengthening the Company by executing key projects, improving the processes and reliability and upgrading equipment. Importantly, our drive for consistent manufacturing excellence continue to yield results with production records and renewed stability and operations. In bauxite, while average daily tons dropped sequentially due to lower production at the MRN mine in Brazil and planned maintenance at Willowdale in Western Australia, daily productions still rose 1% year-over-year. At Willowdale, we safely completed a major overhaul of the mines crusher last quarter to provide uninterrupted internal supplier to our Wagerup refinery, the mine built stocks to prepare for the planned maintenance. In alumina, our refinery portfolio already among the most competitive in the world posted record quarterly production, up 2% from the same period last year. We're also completing a residue filtration project at Pinjarra, our second such improvement project at our Western Australia refineries. First successfully installed at Kwinana, this technology allows resident to be drive stacked conserving both water and land use and providing a more stable residue disposal area. Given the efficiency and competitiveness of our refineries, we're also reviewing equipment upgrades and debottlenecking projects for our aluminum plants in both Western Australia and Brazil. In aluminum, we continue to take steps to strengthen the company overall. For example, as Bill and I mentioned earlier, last quarter, we divested our minority interest in the Ma'aden rolling facility. With our exit, we avoid future capital contributions for the mill and were released of all obligations related to the Ma'aden Rolling Company. This eliminates ongoing financial losses and frees up future cash. Our remaining interest in the Ma'aden JV, which includes the mine, refinery, smelter and casthouse remain intact. We also took steps to reinforce our competitive aluminum footprint in Quebec. First, we reached two new six year labor contracts, one at Baie Comeau and another at Bécancour. The contract of Bécancour ends an 18 month lockout at the smelter. A full restart process is scheduled to officially begin July 26 and will be completed in the second quarter of next year. Good labor contracts ultimately benefit both the employer and employees by increasing the long-term sustainability and profitability of plants, enabling us to provide good paying jobs now and for future generations. At our Deschambault facility, we've implemented plans to increase the smelters 260,000 metric tons of annual production capacity by approximately 10%. Canada's Strategic Innovation Fund will contribute CAD10 million to offset a portion of the CAD85 million upgrade expected to be complete in 2021. The investment will help Deschambault innovate by acquiring cutting edge equipment to boost its average, enable it to lower cost and increase aluminum production. Lastly, in Spain, we signed a conditional agreement with a private equity investment firm to divest the Alcoa Aviles and La Coruna plans. The proposed deal is part of the collective dismissal agreement with the workers representatives at both facilities. For the acquisition to close, however, the investment firm must provide a credit facility by the end of the month to support future operations or the collective dismissal will take effect. Earlier in the year, these two smelters were curtailed reducing aluminum's smelter capacity 5% year-over-year. Over the last few years, we've consistently emphasized the importance of our three strategic priorities to reduce complexity, drive returns and strengthen the balance sheet at the guidepost that drive our decisions. As we enter the second half of the year, we will stay true to these priorities to further strengthen Alcoa. We will continue to emphasize the importance of our safety systems, to keep our people from harm and maintain our unwavering commitment to responsible and sustainable practices across our operations, a key factor in our corporate reputation. We're committed to maintaining the operational improvements we've made over the first half of the year and we look forward to doing even better in the second half of 2019. As raw material prices remain favorable, we'll work to drive those benefits to the bottom line. To strengthen our company's overall, we'll evaluate projects across the globe that remove uncompetitive assets from our portfolio, so we can put our capital and efforts behind the assets and projects that generate the best returns. Alcoa was founded on innovation more than 130 years ago and we will continue our focus on developing breakthrough technology, processes and products for a more sustainable future. We'll undertake these efforts to make our company more competitive and strengthen our balance sheet as appropriate all to provide consistent returns to our stockholders. With that, Bill and I would be happy to take your questions. Sean, please remind us of the instructions and we'll get started.