Displaying items by tag: Prices
China: Anhui Conch Cement’s sales revenue rose by 38% year-on-year to US$2.98bn in the first quarter of 2018 from US$2.16bn in the same period in 2017. Its net profit rose more than doubled to US$757m from US$341m, according to Dow Jones. The rise in sales and profits has been attributed to rising cement prices in smaller cities and demand from the Xiongan New Area project. The cement producer also said that it received a government subsidy of US$18m.
Uganda: Trade minister Amelia Kyambadde has given local cement producers three weeks to lower cement prices otherwise. If they do not cooperate she will allow cheaper exports of cement into the country, according to the Daily Monitor newspaper. A recent surge in the price of cement has led to a crisis in the construction industry with panic buying, hoarding and rationing reported by retailers and consumers.
Rising energy costs to hit Indian cement producers profits
04 January 2018India: The credit agency ICRA forecasts that rising energy and freight costs due to higher pet coke, coal and diesel prices during the first half of 2017 – 2018 financial year may hit the profits of cement producers. Petcoke prices grew by 32% year-on-year in the first half of the year and coal prices rose by 44%, according to the Press Trust of India. Sabyasachi Majumdar, an analyst at ICRA, said that higher power, fuel and freight costs were likely to continue. He added that the ability of cement companies to raise their prices was crucial to maintaining profit levels.
Argentina faces cement shortage
12 December 2017Argentina: Cement plants are reportedly requiring 48 hours notice to process orders due to major growth in the construction sector driven by infrastructure development. Due to this materials such as cement and concrete are facing shortages, according to La Voz newspaper. Prices for building materials have rise by around 40%.
Norberto Ladea, the commercial director of Holcim Argentina, said that the company has expanded its production by approximately 13% year-on-year in 2017 with a cement production capacity of 4.8Mt/yr. It is currently planning its investment to bolster output in 2018.
Global coal prices pile pressure on Pakistan’s cement producers
21 November 2017Pakistan: Rising coal prices are presenting a risk to the profit margins of cement manufactures in Pakistan. It is expected that this sustained rise in coal prices will increase the cost of cement production in the short-term.
Major contributory factors to the higher coal prices include China’s imposition to cut production to 276 days to reduce the supply glut since October 2016, while extra safety checks are resulting in tightened domestic coal supplies in the country. Moreover, tropical storms in the Atlantic basin and floods in Australia and Indonesia are giving rise to logistical issues with coal supply. Nuclear outages in France are driving extra competition for coal.
To add to the already worsened supply situation, South Africa`s National Union of Mine workers (NUM), which represents 70% of employees in the coal mining sector, started a strike on 19 November 2017 over unresolved wage disputes.
Australia: Adelaide Brighton has announced a 10.9% year-on-year fall in net profit for the six months to June to US$54.4m, while revenues rose by 4.7% to US$569.2m. For the full year it expects underlying net profit to be in the range of US$148 - 157m. The company added that a surging property market and a healthy pipeline of infrastructure projects means that it is on the lookout for acquisitions in a bid to keep pace with demand and grow its market share. The company has already spent US$67.7m on bolt-on acquisitions so far in 2017.
“From a demand point of view on the east coast, it’s hard to be pessimistic,” said chief executive Martin Brydon to The Australian newspaper. Brydon said the company was pragmatic about the residential property market eventually cooling off, but any slowdown would not immediately affect the business. “Even if there was a significant drop in approvals or applications for housing, the pipeline is still there for the next 18 months,” he added.
The company also said it was likely to raise cement prices for a second time later in 2017 amid the robust conditions on the east coast, but declined to confirm the likely amount of the price rise. The price rise has been partly precipitated by strong demand but also by rising electricity prices, which remain a major preoccupation for the company. It is expected to spend an extra US$6.3m on electricity within 2017 than it budgeted for, due to unexpectedly high prices.
Nigeria: Alhaji Abdulsamad Isyaku Rabiu, the chairman of Bua Group, has promised that cement prices will soon fall. He made the comments after meeting with Yemi Osinbajo, the vice-president of the country, according to the This Day newspaper. He cited a fall in the price of low pour fuel oil (LPFO) and more favourable foreign exchange rates. He added that the three major cement producers were working ‘hard’ to reduce prices. However, he did not reveal a date for the reduction.
Indian cement producers continue to defend prices
12 June 2017India: Sagar Cements, India Cements and Bharathi Cements have continued to defend public concerns over cement pricing due to economic trends beyond their control. In a press conference the producers blamed rising input costs, distribution costs, taxes and high margins by dealers, according to the Times of India newspaper. They added that the key demand drivers for the industry are residential house building and government projects.
S Srikanth Reddy, Executive Director of Sagar Cements forecast that cement demand will rise by 10 – 18% in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh over the next two to three years due to large government-run infrastructure projects. Tamil Nadu and Kerala are expected to rise by no more than 5% and Karnataka is expected to rise by 2 – 5%.
However, despite increases in the short term, the cement producers forecast problems for the industry in the south of the country, and in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana in particular, due to production overcapacity as producers increased their installed capacity in anticipation of high demand. At present they say that producers are forced to run plants at 60% production utilisation rates with high volatility in price rates in a highly fragmented market with over 50 brands.
Boral benefits from higher sales prices
05 November 2015Australia: Boral chief executive Mike Kane has said that higher product prices are playing a part in the strong performance of its key businesses so far in the 2015-2016 fiscal year. He noted that cement prices were up in New South Wales and southeast Queensland but steady elsewhere.
"Based on the first quarter results, we are seeing an improvement in year-on-year results. The business is consistent with our expectations this year," Kane told shareholders at Boral's AGM. "Price is playing a role in our performance, as well as cost management. On average, we think prices will move up, but we will have more clarity on that as we get through the half year."
The company has experienced lower demand from roads, engineering and major infrastructure projects so far in the 2015 – 2016 fiscal year, but has responded by reducing costs and pushing through a number of surplus property sales.