China Hongqiao Group


China Hongqiao Group Limited is a Chinese aluminum producer founded in 1994. Hongqiao has surpassed its main competitor, UC Rusal, in 2015 and became the largest aluminum producer in the world
The company's founder and Chairman, Zhang Shiping, was ranked 27th on the 2017 Forbes China Rich List with a net worth of $4.8 billion. His son, Zhang Bo, is the Chief Executive Officer of China Hongqiao.
China Hongqiao started producing aluminum and generating electricity in 2002. It has now more than 600 million tons of production capacity.
The company's subsidiaries include Shandong Weiqiao Aluminum Power Co., Ltd., Huimin Huihong New Aluminum Profiles Co., Ltd. and Hongqiao Investment Limited.

History

The company's predecessor Shandong Hongqiao was founded in 1994 to produce and distribute jeans and yarn-dyed denim. Shandong Hongqiao was later renamed China Hongqiao Group. The company acquired a thermal energy provider Aluminum & Power in June 2006, and reoriented to aluminum production a few months later.
The company's annual production capacity reached 301,513 tonnes of aluminum in 2007.
In March 2011, Hongqiao was listed on the Hong Kong stock exchange at a price of $7.20 per share. The IPO reached raised $2.2. In the meantime, the company's annual production capacity reached 1.1 million tonnes per year.
According to the company's own data, the annual aluminum production exceeded four million tonnes in 2014.
In March 2016, Hongqiao declared its capacity increase of 16%, reaching 5.2 million tonnes.. China Hongqiao Group Ltd. announced that it would expand capacity to six million metric tons per annum, or sixteen percent, by the end of 2016, depending on market conditions

Company operations

China

The Group's main production facility is located in Binzhou, Shandong province, China.

Indonesia

In 2013, China Hongqiao Group and Indonesia's Khaleda Group, Weili Investment Co., Ltd. jointly established Hongfa Weili Alumina Co., Ltd., with a joint investment of 1 billion U.S. dollars to build an annual output of 2 million tons of aluminum production in Indonesia's West Kalimantan Province.
In 2016, the company opened its first production facility in Indonesia with an output of one million tons per year. Hongqiao holds 56% stakes in PT Well Harvest Alumina. This was both the first Chinese investment in an alumina refining plant and the first aluminum factory built in Indonesia. Consisting of a power plant and a seaport in Ktapang in the Kalimantan region, the factory converts bauxite into alumina. Sun Xiushun, president of the shipping company Winning International Group as well as shareholder of the joint venture, explained that the treated alumina will mainly be used to meet the local demand for raw materials and the remaining aluminum oxide will be exported to China, the Middle East and other regions.

Guinea

China Hongqiao Group, in conjunction with China Yantai Port Group, Singapore Weili Group and Guinea UMS Company, formed the winning alliance SMB WINNING CONSORTIUM, registered in Guinea to set up a joint development with a local company primarily engaged in bauxite mining with a $200 million investment in the first phase of the project. China Hongqiao Group, in conjunction with China Yantai Port Group, Singapore Weili Group and Guinea UMS Company, formed the winning alliance SMB WINNING CONSORTIUM, registered in Guinea to set up a joint development with a local company primarily engaged in bauxite mining with a $200 million investment in the first phase of the project. The company in question has a construction subsidy in Guinea of an estimated 2.2 billion tones, with a duration of 25 years. The main purpose is to access to new bauxite reserves to meet growing demand in China. In March 2015, the company confirmed that it had reached an agreement on various mining and port investments amounting to US$120 million to promote the development and export of bauxite.
In November 2015, 170 000 tonnes of bauxite were shipped from Guinea to China. In March 2016, China Hongqiao Group announced that it would export approximately 15 million tons of bauxite for 2016 as a whole. For the year 2017, 30 million tons are targeted.

Criticism

Overcapacities

Despite the efforts of the Chinese government to reduce the production surplus in the domestic bauxite industry through reforms, Hongqiao announced in March that production would be increased by 16% to six million tonnes by the end of 2016. According to Peter Thomas, vice president of Zaner Group LLC, it would cause a 1% to 2% drop in aluminum prices.
The issue of overcapacity in the Chinese aluminum industry is a result of government policies, such as cheap loans and government subsidies meant to reduce the production costs of companies. In the case of Hongqiao, the company's growth was driven by a US$2.1 billion loan in 2015.
In August 2016, Hongqiao CEO Zhang Bo dismissed fears of overcapacity in the aluminum industry, emphasizing instead the industry's stability.
The production capacity increased to 5.2 million tonnes from 1.1 million since the IPO.
In August 2017, the company announced to cut two million tonnes of outdated aluminum production capacity, amid a renewed governmental crackdown on illegal production.

Environmental issues

The production of aluminum is an energy intensive process. Hongqiao's aluminum factories are heavily dependent on coal-generated electricity. Due to the high energy consumption, Hongqiao's production plants generate more than 100,000 kt CO2 emissions per year. In 2012, a Chinese journalist reported the deteriorating living conditions of people near factories due to air and water pollution. That same year, the company announced it will switch to coal ash for aluminum production, however, satellite images of the factory in Shandong showed large amounts of red mud, a toxic waste product of the bauxite production process. Since the production of aluminum from coal ash is very expensive, the company opted instead for bauxite. Toxic waste was then stored in the vicinity of agricultural areas, which led to fears that alkaline substances such as iron oxide, silicon oxide and titanium oxide could be released into the atmosphere.
In 2016, Hongqiao was charged with operating unlicensed mills with a capacity of 2,000kt, as well as environmental fraud by ignoring Chinese emissions standards.
Since the Chinese government passed tighter environmental requirements, Hongqiao began to switch to renewable energies and to close small and polluting power plants.
In October 2016, the South China Morning Post reported that Hongqiao's aluminum smelter capacity in Binzhou was threatened after the city ordered a production stop of the local production lines with an annual total capacity of 3.61 million tonnes. In addition to financial penalties, the company also had to close sites because it "disregard for environmental protection permits before construction and operation of the plants". At the same time, the construction of an aluminum hut with an annual production capacity of 1.32 million tonnes was stopped because of missing environmental assessment. Hongqiao did not release any office announcements regarding the issue.

Power generation

China Hongqiao Group invented the "Weiqiao model" which means that aluminum plants are supported by self-built, coal-fueled power plants. This organizational model is now widely used in the Chinese aluminum industry.
CCP media reported in 2012 that the company infringed the regulations of electricity generation by producing cheap electricity outside of the national electricity grid. The State Commission for Development and Reform indicated that the electricity produced by Hongqiao contributes significantly to air pollution, since the environmental protection equipment of the factories was removed in order to reduce production costs. Hongqiao denied the repeated reproaches of the government. In 2015, the company switched off their smaller electricity plants to demonstrate its commitment to clean aluminum production.

Anonymous Report

In November 2016, an anonymous short-seller published a report declared that Hongqiao has deliberately disguised its true profitability, by miss counting its profit margin and debts.
A further report from Emerson Analytics, which seemingly confirmed the allegations, prompted the company to suspend its stock trading on 1 March 2017 after Hongqiao's stock value had fallen by 8.3% within 30 minutes. On March 21, Hongqiao announced a "possible delay" in the publication of its annual results and annual report for the year ended December 31, 2016 due to disagreements raised by auditor Ernst & Young. The following day, China Hongqiao shares were stopped again. The continued delay in the publication of company results, as well as accounting irregularities, led to a credit downgrade in July 2017.