Vapores fall by more than 17% and Santiago Stock Exchange asks for explanations



[ad_1]

During the day came to fall more than 17% so the stock exchanges asked for explanations and the company attributed the market's reaction to the reduction of profit projections of its main shareholder.

The Sudamericana de Vapores recorded its worst day on the Santiago Stock Exchange in history after collapse of 17%.

The company has reached a price of $ 18.61, which is the minimum value since February 17th.

During the day, came to fall 17.22%, so the local place asked an explanation to the company through a letter.

"The shares issued by the company recorded transactions at a price of $ 18.69 each, recording a variation of -16.59%, accumulating in the current week a decrease of 22.7%", says the document. .

Faced with this, the Stock Exchange asked Vapores to inform it "as soon as possible, of any particular circumstance or of any relevant fact that could explain such significant variation".

The company's response, said the fall is related to an ad hoc communication issued today by the German shipping company, Hapag-Lloyd AG. The company presented a profit warning when it lowered its guidance for Ebit and Ebitda in 2018.

The German shipping company is e the largest shareholder of the company, reducing predictions announced today would have affected the shares of Vapores SA

The foreign company explained that the outlook was affected by a significant and continuous significant increase in operating costs since the beginning of the year, particularly in the costs of fuel and vessel rental rates, combined with a slower than expected recovery of freight rates. "These developments can not be fully offset by the cost reduction measures that have already begun," the company said.

Thus, the new projections badume an EBIT of between 200 million euros and 450 million euros (Ebit at December 31, 2017: 410.9 million euros) and a Ebitda in a range of between 900 million euros and 1,150 million euros (Ebitda at December 31, 2017: 1,054.5 million euros).

[ad_2]
Source link