
Displaying items by tag: Americas
Mexico: Cemex has embarked upon a cost cutting exercise following a drop of sales volumes in 2024. Sales volumes of cement, ready-mixed concrete (RMX) and aggregates all fell in 2024. This in turn reduced sales revenue, despite higher prices and earnings. The group’s sales volumes of cement decreased by 2% year-on-year to 44.3Mt in 2024 from 45.2Mt in 2023. RMX sales volumes dropped by 6% to 44Mm3 from 46.8Mm3. Sales revenue and operating earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) dipped by 2% to US$16.2Bn and by 2% to US$3.08Bn respectively.
Sales and earnings rose on a like-for-like basis in Mexico and South, Central America and the Caribbean but fell elsewhere. In Mexico the group noted a strong first half of 2024 followed by a poor second half. In the US it reported a number of ‘extreme’ weather events. In Europe, Middle East, and Africa it said a recovery trend in earnings was observed in the second half of the year.
In response the company has launched ‘Project Cutting Edge,’ a three-year, US$350m saving programme intended to streamline operations, improve efficiency and further use of digital technology throughout the business. The initiative is anticipated to deliver US$150m in incremental EBITDA in 2025 and expected to reach a run-rate of US$350m by 2027.
Fernando A González, CEO of Cemex, said “With the recovery of our investment grade ratings, improved free cash flow generation and the execution of US$2.2bn in asset divestments, we can now pursue more aggressively our capital allocation priorities of growth through small to medium-sized acquisitions, primarily in the US, additional deleveraging, and building further on our shareholder return programs.”
US: Titan Group expects to generate US$365m from the initial public offering (IPO) of its subsidiary Titan America. The latter company has priced its IPO of 24 million common shares at US$16/share. The IPO is expected to close on 10 February 2025, subject to customary closing conditions.
Titan America expects to receive net proceeds of approximately US$137m from the IPO. Some of these funds will be used to support investments in technologies, the company’s growth strategy and acquisitions. Parent company Titan Cement International expects to generate US$228m. Following completion, Titan Cement will retain a 87% share of Titan America.
US: Summit Materials says that it has obtained the stockholder approval required for its proposed acquisition by Quikrete. The transaction is expected to close within the first quarter of 2025, subject to any remaining customary conditions. Once complete, Summit Materials will become a privately-held subsidiary of Quikrete.
Quikrete entered into a definitive agreement to buy Summit Materials for a total enterprise value of US$11.5bn in November 2024. The deal will add Summit Materials’ aggregates, cement and ready-mixed concrete business to Quikrete’s concrete and cement-based products business to create a vertically integrated business in North America.
US: The Portland Cement Association (PCA) has issued a statement following the US government’s announcement of proposed 25% tariffs on imports of cement from Canada and Mexico. The association lauded President Donald Trump’s stated goal of protecting the US cement industry, while also calling for careful consideration of measures to be taken.
President and CEO Mike Ireland said “While the US cement industry agrees with the President’s objectives of bolstering American manufacturing, increasing border security, and advancing the country’s energy independence, the industry believes 25% tariffs on cement imported from Canada and Mexico could adversely affect energy and national security while delaying infrastructure projects and raising their costs.” Ireland continued “The availability of affordable cement and concrete is vital to meet our country’s infrastructure needs and for the oil and gas sector’s expansion. Mexico and Canada play a crucial role in stabilizing US supply, so we appreciate that the administration is open to negotiations and taking a flexible approach to implementing trade policy.”
Mexican National Chamber of Cement speaks out against US’ proposed 25% tariff on cement
05 February 2025Mexico: The Mexican National Chamber of Cement (CANACEM) has warned that the US government’s proposed reimposition of a 25% tariff on imports of cement from Mexico may trigger a ‘competitiveness crisis’ in the US, with dire consequences for North America as a whole. Mexico exported 1.5Mt of cement to the US in 2024. This corresponds to 7% of US cement imports and 1.4% of the country’s total consumption. The El Norte newspaper has reported that CANACEM sees the current situation as an opportunity for Mexican and US policymakers and stakeholders to increase their mutually beneficial initiatives, citing the example of a proposed Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) on a region-wide scale.
CANACEM president José María Barroso said "In addition to incentivising more sustainable production, this would promote greater integration and strengthen the regional market. The Mexican cement industry is ready to work with our government and our trade partners to find solutions that promote greater regional integration."
St Marys Cement orders Airslide analyser from SpectraFlow Analytics
05 February 2025Canada: St Marys Cement, Votorantim Cimentos’ North American subsidiary, has ordered SpectraFlow Analytics’ Airslide analyser for its Bowmanville cement plant in Ontario. The analyser will replace the plant’s existing XRF Atline system installed at the back end of the plant’s 450t/hr raw materials mill. It will provide continuous one-minute sampling results, without the need to prepare samples separately. This in turn will facilitate real-time adjustments to the line’s additive weight feeders.
SpectraFlow Analytics says that its equipment will now be installed at plants across 30 countries globally.
Holcim does not expect impact from US tariffs
04 February 2025US: Holcim’s CEO Miljan Gutovic says he does not expect any effects of proposed US tariffs upon his company. "I don't really see any impact, because our business is a local business (in the US)," said Gutovic in an interview with Reuters. "We are producing locally, we are sourcing the equipment, the spare parts locally, so how is this going to affect us? I do not see it." He added that the proposed tariffs were also unlikely to pose any problems to the group’s planned spin-off of its business in the US. The listing of its North America-based business is remains scheduled for the first half of 2025.
The US government proposed tariffs upon imported goods from Canada and Mexico in early February 2025 but these have been paused for one month. Tariffs on China are set to start on 4 February 2025. US President Donald Trump has also spoken about implementing tariffs on the EU.
Heidelberg Materials North America enters into binding agreement to acquire Giant Cement for US$600m
03 February 2025US: Heidelberg Materials North America has signed a binding agreement with Giant Cement’s multiple minority shareholders to acquire the producer outright. Noticias Financieras News has reported that Heidelberg Materials North America will pay approximately US$600m for the business. Giant Cement is scheduled to fully shut its Thomaston, Maine, cement plant in early 2025.
Giant Cement belongs to Spain-based Cementos Portland Valderrivas, with a 45% stake, Mexico-based Cementos Fortaleza (41%) and Mexico-based Trituradora y Procesadora de Materiales Santa Anita (14%).
Eagle Materials raises nine-month sales in 2024
31 January 2025US: Eagle Materials raised its sales in the first nine months of 2024, by under 1%, to US$1.79bn. Its profit also grew by under 1%, to US$569m. However, sales by its Heavy Materials Sector, which includes its cement, concrete and aggregates businesses, declined by 4% to US$352m. Cement revenue for the quarter was also down by 4% to US$295m, reflecting lower cement sales volume and increase in cement maintenance costs due to the planned outages at the company’s Oklahoma and Texas cement plants during the quarter. Cement sales volumes decreased by 7% to 1.7Mt.
President and CEO Michael Haack praised the company’s overall growth in the face of ‘ongoing adverse weather’ in the Midwest and Great Plains markets, which reportedly affected sales volume of the company’s cement business. He said “While the path to lower interest rates and improved home-buying affordability is less certain today, we remain optimistic about our businesses and our ability to execute on the opportunities in front of us. On the cement side, spending from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act is still in the beginning phases, which should support multiple years of strong cement demand.”
Dominican Republic: Cementos Progreso Holdings has acquired Cemex’s operations in the Dominican Republic, as well as the company’s export business in Haiti. The deal was first announced in August 2024, and has now been completed, having met all legal requirements. The company said that it will retain the 500 existing staff, in order to continue ‘offering products and services of the highest quality.’ Cementos Progreso now operates in eight countries in Latin America and the Caribbean.