UK steel mill Liberty Steel Newport (LSN) transferred shares worth around £3.8mn ($4.9mn) to Liberty Commodities in the financial year to March 2019, to settle debt to the trading company. Both are subsidiaries of UK-based Liberty House Group.
The LSN hot-rolling mill in Newport, Wales, made a profit of £3.75mn in the financial year to March, despite operating at a fraction of its 1mn t/yr capacity for much of the period. LSN sales of hot-rolled coil (HRC) accounted for only £123.7mn of revenue, from a total £326mn for the year, with around £202mn generated from the sale of other, unspecified goods. Based on its sales and assuming an average UK HRC price of around £490/t ddp West Midlands in April 2018-March 2019, LSN operated at around 25pc capacity, according to Argus calculations.
LSN held £19.4mn-worth of raw materials and consumables inventories at the end of March, and finished products worth£12.7mn. It recorded a £2.79mn impairment on its cost of sales because of slow moving and obsolete inventories. The company had £99.5mn in liabilities, including over £31mn for its stock financing facility.
The mill purchased £65.9mn-worth of goods from Liberty subsidiaries that are not 100pc-owned by the group and owed £22.7mn to these entities. LSN did not disclose balances or transactions with wholly owned Liberty businesses. LSN sold £20,000 of goods to these subsidiaries, down from over £3mn the previous year, but was owed £23.1mn.

