Displaying items by tag: Greece
Titan’s losses mount in Q1
09 May 2012Greece: Titan Cement has reported a widening quarterly loss after construction activity collapsed in the wake of the Greek debt crisis.
Titan's net loss for the first quarter of 2012 stood at Euro19.4m from Euro4.3m in the same period of 2011. Titan has been hit hard by a plunge in private housing investment and drastic cutbacks in public spending on infrastructure in Greece. Greek building volume contracted for a sixth consecutive year in 2011, shrinking to just a fifth of its size in 2005, the sector's last year of expansion.
"In Greece the uncertainty associated with the ongoing crisis and the worsening economic recession form a particularly challenging backdrop for private building activity," Titan said in a statement. The firm said it would continue cutting its operating costs and that it expected annual savings of Euro26m from a restructuring plan it launched in 2011.
Titan, which earlier in 2012 scrapped its dividend for the first time in 58 years, has been counting on growth in new markets such as north Africa and Turkey to offset the building slump in Greece. Yet, political crisis in Egypt has hurt its prospects there.
Titan's group sales declined by 11% year-on-year to Euro225.4m. Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) fell by 29% to Euro34 m.
Titan profit drops by 89%
02 March 2012Greece: Titan Cement, Greece's biggest cement producer, has posted an 89% drop in its 2011 net profit compared to that of 2010. It has forecast further declines in 2012 after the collapse of the building industry in its recession-hit home market. The company, which recently celebrated its 100-year anniversary, said that it will not distribute a dividend for the first time in 58 years.
Titan has been hit hard by a plunge in private housing investment and drastic cutbacks in public spending on infrastructure in Greece, which is stuck in its fifth year of recession at the centre of the Eurozone crisis.
The group said that its net profit fell to Euro11m in 2011 from Euro103m in 2010. Conditions at home are not expected to improve in 2012.
"In Greece there is no visibility at this time of either a reversal of the downward trend in private construction or the much anticipated restarting of infrastructure works," the company said in a statement."Demand for the group's products will record a further considerable decline in 2012."
The company has been counting on growth in new markets such as north Africa and Turkey to offset building slumps in Greece and the United States and difficult conditions in Egypt where it also has operations. However, political unrest in Libya, where Titan runs two cement plans, halted exports to the region throughout 2011. Group sales across all of Titan's markets declined by 19% year-on-year to Euro1.1bn in 2011. Its earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) fell by 23% to Euro243m.
Titan has embarked on a two-year restructuring plan, which is expected to cut costs by Euro26m/yr. The impact of the restructuring and a Euro19m asset impairment charge hurt its fourth quarter performance. In the last quarter of 2011, Titan had a net loss of Euro42m versus a net profit of Euro5m in the same period in 2010.
Titan income plummets by 46% in 2011
11 November 2011Greece: Titan has reported a 46% decrease in income for the first nine months of 2011. The group attributed the fall to a 'rapid decline in construction activity in Greece' in conjunction with the ongoing Greek debt crisis.
Income for the first nine months of 2011 was Euro52.9m, a year-on-year fall of 46.2% from Euro98.3m in 2010. The year-on-year quarterly decline was less severe dropping 1.7% to Euro30m in 2011 from Euro29.5m in 2010. Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) fell by 15.5% to Euro219.8m for the first nine months of 2011 from Euro 260.3m in 2010. Turnover fell by 18.4% to Euro838.9m in the first nine months of 2011 from Euro1028.5m in 2010.
Aside from the domestic construction slump, the group also cited continuing low levels of demand in the US and the slowdown recorded in Egypt during the third quarter of 2011. Increased prices for liquid and solid fuels also had a negative impact on production costs. In addition the depreciation of the Egyptian Pound as well as the Turkish Lira against the Euro negatively impacted results. At constant exchange rates, the group predicted that turnover would have declined by 14%, while the decline in EBITDA would have stood at 10.5%.
Titan reports a 66% drop in net profit
03 August 2011Greece: Titan Group has recorded a poor set of financial results for the second quarter and first half of 2011, in line with independent forecasts. Turnover in the first six months of 2011 was down by 18.2% year-on-year to Euro557m, earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) declined by 12.4% to Euro141.4m and the group's net profit was Euro23.4m, down a massive 65.7% on 2010.
The weakening of the Egyptian pound and Turkish Lira, as well as the US Dollar versus the Euro, led to negative foreign exchange effects. At stable exchange rates, the decline in Group turnover would have stood at 14.1% and the decline in EBITDA would have been 6.6%. The group's results were also negatively impacted by increases in the price of fuels.
The deterioration in operating results was mainly attributed to the sharp decline in construction activity in Greece (reaching a nearly 40-year low), in conjunction with the deep and persisting depression of construction activity in the USA. In contrast, Group's activities in developing countries, particularly in the Eastern Mediterranean region, increased their contribution to the group's operating results.
In Greece, the combination of growing uncertainty regarding employment and attendant future household income, coupled with the decline in new loans issuance on the part of banks and the existing surplus housing stock, resulted in a sharp decline in demand for building materials. The repeated cutbacks in public investment programmes and the state's inability to cover its arrears, have brought public works to a standstill. In Greece Titan's EBITDA consequently declined by 49.4% compared to the first six months of 2010 to stand at Euro26.9m.
In the USA, construction activity continues to be faced with a very poor set of circumstances. Uncertainty regarding the timing of the economy's turnaround in conjunction with the country's debt crisis, the containment of public expenditure and the high levels of unemployment are preventing the recovery of the construction sector. Activity in the south east states, where Titan is primarily active, remains particularly stagnant at the very low levels witnessed in recent years. EBITDA in the USA recorded a loss of Euro4.8m in the first six months of 2011.
In south east Europe, indications emerged that the recovery in the region's economies is gradually beginning to have a positive impact on construction activity. Within the context of its stated goal of reducing its carbon footprint, the group completed the installation of a new unit in Bulgaria within the plant's perimeter for the pre-processing and recycling of municipal waste, which is expected to come on stream in the third quarter of 2011. EBITDA in the region of south east Europe recorded marginal growth, reaching Euro42.7m.
The social upheaval in Egypt is gradually affecting the country's growth rates and subsequently also pulling down the construction sector. In contrast, the growth of the Turkish economy has led to higher demand in the construction sector as well. EBITDA in the eastern Mediterranean region grew by 19.5% to Euro76.5m.
The prospects for Greece in the second half of 2011 remain very poor. Cement demand for the full year is forecast to stand at just 35% of 2006-7 levels. Support from the EU, which aims to kick-start investments and public works, is not expected to lead to a meaningful improvement in the coming year. In line with poor expectations in Greece and Titan's other major areas of interest, the group has said that it will continue to focus its efforts on the generation of free cash flow aiming at improving its financial flexibility.