Hong Kong: Rusal, the world’s largest aluminium producer, said Friday its net loss blew out to more than $3 billion last year as it was hit by record low metal prices and one-off restructuring charges.

The Hong Kong-listed Russian giant said it lost $3.22 billion, compared with a loss of $528 million in 2012, while revenue slumped 10.4 percent to $9.76 billion.

However, the company’s chief executive Oleg Deripaska forecast an uptick in demand for aluminium over the next two years, in line with a global economic recovery.

In a filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange, Rusal said it paid impairment and one-off restructuring charges of $1.92 billion, including the cost of putting on hold the Taishet smelter project in Russia’s Irkutsk region because of a weak market.

It also said the price of aluminium had tumbled 8.6 percent last year to a record low of $1,845 per tonne as demand tailed off.

Deripaska said that “2013 was another challenging year for the aluminium industry, despite consumption growth of 6 percent to 51.7 million tonnes”.

However, he expect to see a six percent increase in the demand for aluminium between 2014 and 2015, along with “clear signs” that the global economy will improve.

Shares in Rusal fell 1.47 per cent to HK$2.68 ($0.35) in Hong Kong by lunch, while the benchmark Hang Seng Index was up 1.28 per cent.

The firm said its aluminium production fell 7.6 per cent year on year in 2013, with total output for the fourth quarter alone diving 12.9 per cent.

Rusal in December triggered a judicial review of plans by the London Metals Exchange to reform how it stockpiles commodities to expedite deliveries of base metals, in particular aluminium, that are traded on it.

The plan announced in November of last year is aimed at benefiting consumers and boosting the LME’s market credibility. But producers strongly oppose the plan.

AFP