BHP Billiton CEO Speaks Out On China as Profit Tumbles 86%

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BHP Billiton (ASX:BHP) posted a steep fall in profit, missing analyst expectations in the face of a commodity price rout as it warned that economic reforms in China would likely mean further short-term volatility for markets.

BHP Billiton (ASX:BHP) posted a steep fall in profit, missing analyst expectations in the face of a commodity price rout as it warned that economic reforms in China would likely mean further short-term volatility for markets.
As quoted in the market news:

The mining giant said profits after tax for the full year ending in June tumbled 86 percent to $1.91 billion, sharply down from $13.8 billion the previous year. Underlying attributable profits also tanked from $13.26 billion to $6.4 billion.
But the group also said its productivity gains of $4.1 billion were two years ahead of schedule and it expects further cost reductions in the 2016 financial year across all businesses.
Appearing on CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” BHP Billiton CEO, Andrew Mackenzie, said he believed China would continue to grow at 7 percent this year as the country tries to balance its “desire to grow with some side effects of growing too quickly.”
“There may be people outside of China who doubt that, but when they were growing at 10 percent we had a number of leading indicators that would substantiate that.”
Citing Apple CEO Tim Cook’s recent note that demand for its devices is still strong in China as evidence, Mackenzie complimented China’s handling of the situation.
“I think they are playing it well,” he said. “We’re still seeing strong sales of iron ore, coal, and copper moving into China. We’re able to place most of our products many weeks and even months forward and there is no evidence that inventory is building up anywhere along the chain.”

View the CNBC interview here.

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