MUMBAI (Reuters) - Tata Steel Ltd, Europe's second-largest steel producer, said on Thursday market conditions in Britain had "significantly worsened" during its second quarter due to a slump in prices and more cheap Chinese imports.
Tata Steel, which has cut thousands of jobs since it bought Anglo-Dutch producer Corus in 2007, has been working on turning around its struggling operations in Britain.
The crisis in Britain's steel sector escalated further last week as Tata Steel blamed its decision to cut British jobs on a flood of cheap imports, particularly from China.
Tata said on Thursday the "rapid and sharp deterioration" in the British business environment had forced it to take a non-cash impairment charge which, together with restructuring charges and other provisions, totalled 87 billion rupees ($1.3 billion).
"Our operating result has turned negative this year, reflecting the huge challenges the global steel industry is facing. In the UK these issues have been compounded by unhelpful exchange rates and regulatory costs that are destroying competitiveness," Karl-Ulrich Köhler, CEO of Tata Steel in Europe, said in a statement.
Tata, which also operates in India and South East Asia, reported a surprise 22 percent rise in its quarterly consolidated net profit, as one-time gains helped offset cheaper imports from the world's top steel producer China.
More From This Section
Net profit at Tata Steel, a unit of a hotels-to-automobiles conglomerate, rose to 15.29 billion rupees ($232.9 million) on a consolidated basis in the quarter ended Sept. 30, compared to 12.54 billion rupees in the year ago period.
Analysts had forecast a net profit of 11.8 billion rupees, data compiled by Thomson Reuters shows.
The profit was helped by 28 billion rupees earned from the sale of quoted investments during the quarter, Tata said in a regulatory statement.
($1 = 65.7583 rupees)
(Reporting by Sumeet Chatterjee; Writing by Tommy Wilkes, editing by William Hardy)