November 2024
Lafarge buys strategic interest in port 14 June 2011
Spain: French cement group Lafarge has announced that it has acquired a 35% stake in the cement plant of Spanish construction and property development group Lubasa at the port of Castellon.
Under the agreement, the facility will receive clinker supplies from Lafarge cement plants. The company declined to reveal financial details of the deal.
APCMA appeals to government after losses 13 June 2011
Pakistan: All Pakistan Cement Manufacturers Association (APCMA) has appealed to the government to rescue the ailing cement industry, which has suffered net accumulated losses of USD16.3m during the first nine months of the current fiscal year (which ends 30 June 2011).
A spokesman for the APCMA said that the cement industry suffered losses mainly due to rapid increase in input prices like coal, furnace oil, electricity, paper bags, interest rate, diesel and transportation. He said that prevailing market cement prices were inadequate to meet the increased cost of production.
In the first nine months only three cement units earned a profit. The spokesman said that this lopsided performance of the sector is mainly due to stagnant domestic demand and a steep decline in exports of 12.52%. The units located in the northern part of the country had lost export viability due to higher transportation costs between their production sites and the coast.
Industry experts fear a total collapse of the sector if immediate remedial steps are not taken and that the decline in domestic sales of cement is a direct reflection of subdued economic activities. However, as the global economy shows signs of recovery, the decline in cement exports should be a matter of grave concern for the economic managers of the country.
Saudi cement firms make large year-on-year gain 10 June 2011
Saudi Arabia: Cement companies in Saudi Arabia recorded a 16% increase in sales in April 2011, the highest in more than a year. Domestic cement sales grew to 4.2Mt in April 2011, compared with 3.6Mt in the same period of 2010. Private projects, notably those for housing and schools boosted demand for the material.
"In 2010 people were very wary. The last thing they wanted to do was commit money, but now the outlook is looking brighter," said Farouk Miah, an analyst at NCB Capital in Riyadh. "There is also a lot of activity for plans to develop the rest of the country, in Makkah, Madina and Jeddah," he added.
Saudi Arabia is expected to need two million more homes by 2014 to keep up with the demands of a population that has quadrupled in 40 years. Shares of cement companies have already had a decent run in 2011, up an average of 24% over the same period of 2010.
It is expected that Saudi Cement, Southern Province Cement and Yamama Cement should benefit from the demand because they have the largest volume. Smaller cement companies, which are already running at full capacity, will be less well positioned to benefit.
Tsunami reconstruction demand calculated 09 June 2011
Japan: Post-earthquake reconstruction demand is expected to boost pre-tax profits at four major Japanese cement firms by a combined USD 411m until 2016.
Assuming that their market shares remain the same, reconstruction demand will push up pre-tax profits by USD 187.2m at Taiheiyo Cement Corp, USD 100m at Sumitomo Osaka Cement Co., USD 62.4m at Mitsubishi Materials Corp. and USD 62.4m at Ube Industries Ltd.
The Japan Cement Association estimates that 10Mt of cement will be used for reconstruction projects. The figure was arrived at based on damages estimated by the Cabinet Office and how cement sales increased in the aftermath of the 1995 Kobe earthquake. The trade group believes that full reconstruction will take about five years.
Cement firms each book an operating profit of about USD 50/t of cement sold. Taiheiyo Cement controls almost 40% of the market in Japan's north-eastern Tohoku region. Reconstruction demand will push up the firm's cement sales by nearly 4Mt, translating to a USD 37.4m contribution to pre-tax profit annually for the next five years.
New President for Cemex UK 08 June 2011
UK: Cemex has appointed Jesus Gonzalez as the company's new president for its UK operations. He was previously employed by Cemex in Panama, where he acted as president for the company's Central American operations.
Gonzalez has been employed by Cemex since 1998 and replaces Gonzalo Galindo, who has been appointed to the position of regional president, USA East.
Holcim back into profit in Q1 07 June 2011
Switzerland: Holcim has reported a return to profitability in its first quarter 2011 financial results, with net income of Euro8.07m on a 1.8% decline in sales. For comparison Holcim made a loss of Euro54.9m in the same period of 2010. The group's revenue for the first quarter of 2011 was Euro3.67bn compared to Euro3.83bn in the first quarter of 2010. The group's earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) was down by 17.1% compared to the first quarter of 2010 at Euro608.2m. The company attributed the decline to negative currency impacts of Euro59m. When looking at like-for-like EBITDA, however, the decline was only 1.8%. The company added that like previous first quarters, the cash flow from operating activities was minus Euro434m due to seasonal factors.
Holcim said that it expects the construction market to continue to recover in 2011. Reporting its expectations for the rest of 2011 Holcim said, "We are still of the opinion that the construction sector in the mature markets will recover and that the growth in emerging markets will continue." Holcim added that it was confident of, "securing its share of future growth in the emerging market and that its lean cost structures will enable it to benefit above average from continuing economic recovery in Europe and North America."
French Lafarge's Frangey site to close doors in 2012 06 June 2011
France: On 1 June 2011 Lafarge announced that it would close its plant in Frangey, northern France, by the end of 2012. The site, which employs 74 people, is struggling due to overcapacity and high production costs. The workers will be offered alternative positions within the group. Workers at 10 cement plants and four grinding facilities in France staged a one-day strike on 6 June 2011 in protest at the closure.
Indonesia: China National Building Material Co Ltd (CNBM) plans to invest USD 350m in the construction of a 16,000t/day cement plant in the next two years on Indonesia's main Java island. Indonesia is looking to overhaul dilapidated infrastructure and domestic cement firms are also ramping up output to meet growing demand. Indonesia's largest cement maker Semen Gresik aims to boost its output by 50% by 2015.
India: India Cement Ltd announced its standalone and consolidated annual results for the year ending 31 March 2011 on 30 May 2011.The company registered a decline in its net sales by 7.17% to US$778.9m for the year ended 31 March 2011 from US$839.1m registered in the previous fiscal year. Total expenditure (excluding depreciation) increased by 4.15% and for the 2011 fiscal year it stood at US$682.4m, up from US$6.552m. The rise in expenditure was attributed to increases in power and fuel charges. In line with this company posted a net profit of US$15.15m, down from US$78.83m in the preivous fiscal year, a tremendous decline of nearly 81%.
The cement industry, which recorded impressive double-digit growth in the last four years, entered a phase of decelleration with the demand slackening during the year under review and registered a growth of 'only' 4.7%. An analysis of the demand reveals that while the growth in the west of India was 11.7% followed by the east at 10.3%, the central region at 9.7% and the north at 3.1%, the south registered a contraction of 3.4%. Within the south, Andhra Pradesh registered a significant decline of 17.1% in demand. With substantial increase in the capacity in the southern region, this negative growth had put pressure on cement prices, which reached their lowest level in the past five years during the second quarter of the period under review.
Over all capacity utilisation for the industry fell to 76% and in the south capacity utilisation was at just 66%.
Nigeria: BUA Group has embarked on the building of a USD 500m cement plant at Okpella community in Edo. When completed the plant will produce 2.5Mt/yr of cement. Executive Chairman of BUA Group, Alhaji Abdulsamad Rabiu, announced at the contract signing ceremony for the building of the plant on 2 June 2011 in Abuja that the building of the Edo Cement Plant would be completed by August 2013.
"The building of the Edo Cement Plant will take 28 months to be completed and it is expected to offer jobs to 4000 skilled workers and over 20,000 indirect jobs to Nigerians," Rabiu stated. He explained that the management of BUA Group had signed a contract for FLSmidth to build the plant, saying that the establishment of the facility was to assist the country to attain self-sufficiency in cement production. The project will be financed by FLSmidth and a consortium of banks led by EcoBank, which has so far provided an initial US$50m to initiate the project. Other banks in the consortium include First Bank, Diamond Bank, Fin Bank and Bank PHB.
The President of the Cement Manufacturing Association of Nigeria, Mr Joseph Makoju, lauded the management of BUA Group for the investment, saying that the plant would contribute significantly to the quest of the Federal Government to make Nigeria a net cement exporter. He lauded the government for its back-integration policy in the cement sector, saying that the policy would assist in efforts to reduce the high cost of cement and other building materials in the country. He expressed delight at the involvement of FLSmidth, saying that the company had already been involved in a number of successful cement plants in Nigeria.
The Vice President of FLSmidth, Mr Per Mejnert Kristensen, gave an assurance that his company would complete the building of the plant on schedule while commending the Federal Government for providing the atmosphere for foreign direct investment. He said his company would build a facility Nigerians would be proud of.