Displaying items by tag: Results
Italy: Italcementi has reported that its revenue fell by 6.2% to Euro2.16bn for the first half of 2013 from Euro2.30bn in the same period in 2012. The Italian-based cement producer commented that, despite the decrease in sales volumes, its revenue reduction was smaller (3.6%) in the second quarter of 2013.
"Our programme to contain fixed costs together with close control of variable costs enabled us to lower our breakeven point, slightly ahead of our targets, despite continuing difficulties in market conditions, especially in Italy," said Italcementi group chief operating officer Giovanni Ferrario.
Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) fell by 10.6% to Euro299m from Euro334m. The group posted a loss for the period of Euro43.3m compared with a profit of Euro1.3m in the first half of 2012, when gains of Euro8.6m were reported on the sale of its subsidiaries Afyon and Fuping. Net debt for the period was broadly unchanged for the period at Euro2bn.
Overall cement sales fell by 7.1% to 21.8Mt. By region, cement sales fell by 12.4% to 7.2Mt in Central Western Europe and by 11.7% to 6.9Mt in Emerging Europe, North Africa and Middle East. Cement sales rose by 1% to 2Mt in North America and by 5.3% in Asia. In the cement business, for the second quarter the group reported a significant reduction in the decline in Europe and Morocco, positive performance in North America and stability in sales in Asia. Sales volumes in Egypt were affected by difficulties in fuel procurement. A particular poor performance in Italy was singled out.
In its outlook, Italcementi speculated that its results in the second half of 2013 should be in line with the second half of 2012 due to market improvements in selected countries and the impact of cost cutting exercises, particularly in Italy and Spain. However, it warned that full-year profitability would be hit by the poor first quarter of 2013.
France: Ciments Français' earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) have slowed their reduction year-on-year to 5.2% in the first half of 2013. The Italcementi subsidiary reported that sales recovered in the second quarter of 2013.
In the first half of 2012 EBITDA fell by 17.1% year-on-year. In the first half of 2013 EBITDA fell year-on-year by 5.2% to Euro305.4m from Euro323.6m from the same period in 2012. Revenue for the half year decreased by 4.2% to Euro1.83bn from Euro1.91bn. By quarter, revenue fell by 7.3% in the first quarter of 2013 but only fell by 1.6% in the second quarter of 2013.
Cement sales for the first half of 2013 fell by 4.8% to 19.2Mt. By region, cement sales fell by 5.8% to 4.5Mt in Western Europe and by 11.7% in Emerging Europe, North Arica and Middle East. Sales rose by 1% in North America and by 5.3% in Asia. By country, cement sales were particularly down in Egypt, due to fuel supply issues, and in Morocco.
In its outlook Ciments Français expected that its full year results would be comparable to those in 2012. However, market trends in territories such as Egypt present significant variables in making forecasts.
Spain: Cementos Molins has reported a drop of 58% in its profit for the first half of 2013 to Euro8.3m. The Spanish cement producer announced a loss of Euro22.4m which was offset by a Euro30.7m net profit registered abroad. It reported sales of Euro416m. The company's net debt was reduced year-on-year by Euro7m to Euro309m.
UltraTech Q1 profit sinks by 13.5% to US$111m
31 July 2013India: UltraTech Cement has reported a 13.5% drop in profit after tax to US$111m for the quarter ending on 30 June 2013. The cement producer, part of the Aditya Birla Group, offered no explanation for the decrease in profit. It did state that the quarter saw logistic and raw materials costs rise, linked to rises in railway freight and diesel prices.
The company's net sales for the quarter fell by 2% year-on-year to US$820m from US$837m. Profit before interest, depreciation and tax fell by 10% to US$205m from US$228m. Combined domestic cement and clinker sales were 9.94Mt. In its outlook UltraTech expected business to be challenging depending on housing demand and infrastructure spending.
In its development plans UltraTech reported that it has commissioned its 3.3Mt clinker plant in Karnataka. US$350m has been set aside to set up grinding plants, taking the company current capital expenditure total to US$2.25bn. Cement production capacity is planned to rise by 10Mt/yr by 2015 bringing the company's total capacity to 64.45Mt/yr.
Dangote profit up by 52% in first half
29 July 2013Nigeria: Dangote Cement has announced that its half-year pretax profit rose by 52.1% to US$669m in 2013 compared with US$436m in the first half of 2012. Dangote said that a Nigerian building boom was behind the rise in profit.
Turnover at Nigeria's largest listed company rose to US$1.23bn during the six months to 30 June 2013, up by 28.5% from US$905m in 2012. The company announced that it expected a pretax profit of US$308m in the third quarter of 2013 from sales of US$603m.
Meanwhile, Reuters has reported that Dangote has announced plans to increase its cement capacity in Nigeria to 29Mt/yr by 2015 from 19.5Mt/yr at present. It added that it wants to expand its capacity to 55Mt/yr across Africa by 2016.
Dangote also reported that cement demand in Nigeria had risen to 11Mt/yr during the first half of 2013, a 14% year-on-year rise compared to the same period of 2012. This, the company said, was caused by a surge in government infrastructure projects.
Lafarge profit hit in second quarter
26 July 2013France: The French multinational cement producer Lafarge has reported that its earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) fell year-on-year in the second quarter of 2013. Despite this Lafarge said that its EBITDA was 'steady' considering the adverse weather conditions, absence of carbon dioxide sales and the negative impacts of foreign exchange variations seen during the quarter.
EBITDA for the second quarter of 2013 was recorded as Euro922m, 8% down on the second quarter of 2012 when it was Euro1002m. Operating income was also down from Euro750m in the second quarter of 2012 to Euro667m in the second quarter of 2013. However, Lafarge's net income for the quarter was Euro201m, significantly up on the same period of 2012 due to exceptional items during the year-ago quarter relating to Greek assets. It reported that it generated a total of Euro260m in the first half of 2013, which Lafarge described as 'on track' with its plan.
The group sold a total of 36.5Mt of cement in the second quarter compared to 38.4Mt in the second quarter of 2012. It sold 65.2Mt/yr of cement in the first half of 2013 against 69.7Mt sold in the first half of 2012.
Lafarge's net debt at the end of June 2013 was down by Euro0.7bn compared to at the end of June 2012, reflecting the strict control of investments and working capital optimisation. With the recently announced divestment of its US gypsum operations, the group has secured Euro1.5bn since the beginning of 2012. Euro0.9bn more will come in the second half of 2013.
Bruno Lafont, Chairman and Chief Executive of Lafarge, said, "Our results in the second quarter resisted in an environment that was marked by a conjunction of unfavourable circumstances. We increased prices and performance and innovation results are in line with our 2013 Euro650m additional EBITDA target. Taking into account first-half volumes, we foresee a cement demand growth in our markets of 0-3% in 2013, which implies more positive trends in the second half."
Lafarge's sales volumes across all business lines were down in the second quarter of 2013. It suggested that this was in part due to a better-than-expected 2012 performance and poorer weather in 2013, especially in North America. A temporary fuel shortage in Egypt also put some pressure on cement volumes in that country.
Across all business units Lafarge's EBITDA in North America was Euro141m in the second quarter of 2013, down by 17% (8% on a like-for-like basis) compared to Euro170m in the same period of 2013. EBITDA for this region was flat year-on-year despite the loss of assets in the US cement industry. This represents a like-for-like improvement of 17%.
In Western Europe, Lafarge's EBITDA was Euro145m, down by 16% (14% like-for-like) compared to Euro173m in the second quarter of 2012. In the first half overall its EBITDA plummeted by 45% (38% like-for-like) from Euro255m in 2012 to Euro150m in 2013.
In Central and Eastern Europe, EBITDA was also down in the second quarter, from Euro101m in 2012 to Euro80m in 2013. This was a 21% fall in both absolute and like-for-like terms. In the first half of 2013 its performance was similarly poor, with a 48% drop in EBITDA from Euro87m in the first half of 2012 to Euro45m in the first half of 2013.
The Middle East and Africa saw an 8% decline in EBITA in absolute terms (1% like-for-like) from Euro329m in the second quarter of 2012 to Euro304m in the second quarter of 2013. Over the first half of 2013 its EBITDA for this region fell by 15% in absolute terms (10% like-for-like) from Euro646m in 2012 to Euro550m in 2013.
Latin America, however, saw a 1% improvement (7% like-for-like) in EBITA year-on-year from Euro70m in the second half of 2012 to Euro71m in the second quarter of 2013. In the first half its EBITDA for this region fell by 5% year-on-year (up 1% like-for-like) from Euro129m in 2012 to Euro122m in 2013.
Finally, Lafarge's best performing region was Asia, where it recorded EBITDA improvement of 14% year-on-year (16% like-for-like) in the second quarter to Euro181m from Euro159m. In the first half, absolute improvement in EBITDA was also 14% higher (17% like-for-like) at Euro306m compared to Euro268m in 2012.
Looking towards the future, Lafarge expects cement growth in its markets of 0-3% in 2013 compared to 2012, factoring in low volumes in the first-half. Emerging markets continue to be the main driver of demand and Lafarge says that it will benefit from its 'well-balanced geographic spread of high-quality assets.'
The group also expects higher pricing in 2013 and that cost inflation will continue, although at a lower rate than in 2012. This, it says, will benefit from positive trends in coal and petcoke prices. The group targets to deliver additional EBITDA of Euro650m in the year through its performance and innovation measures.
Mexico: Cemex has reported that consolidated net sales reached US$4.0bn during the second quarter of 2013, an increase of 4% compared to the comparable period of 2012.
Operating earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) also increased by 4% year-on-year during the quarter to US$730m. Adjusting for the higher number of business days in its operations during the quarter, consolidated net sales improved by 2% and operating EBITDA increased by 2% year-on-year. Operating earnings before other expenses, net, during the second quarter increased by 24% to US$451m. Cemex said that an increase in consolidated net sales was mainly due to higher prices in local currency terms and higher volumes in most of its regions. However, controlling interest net income was a loss of US$152m, an improvement over a loss of US$187m during the same period of 2012.
Fernando A González, executive vice president of finance and administration, said, "We are pleased to report that this is the eighth consecutive quarter with year-over-year improvement in EBITDA. We also saw an increase in our consolidated prices in local-currency terms for cement, ready mix and aggregates during the quarter. On the cost side, our alternative fuel substitution initiatives remain a very high priority. On a consolidated basis, our alternative fuel utilisation reached 28% during the quarter. In addition, we are implementing targeted cost-reduction initiatives in Mexico and northern Europe, which we expect will result in savings of about US$100m during the second half of 2013."
Net sales in Cemex's Mexican operations increased by 2% year-on-year in the second quarter of 2013 to US$847m. Operating EBITDA decreased by 17% to US$250m. In the United States, Cemex reported net sales of US$868m for the quarter, up by 9% year-on-year compared to the 2012 quarter. Operating EBITDA increased to US$80m in the quarter, compared to US$27m in the same quarter of 2012. Cemex's operations in South, Central America and the Caribbean reported net sales of US$561m during the second quarter of 2013, representing an increase of 6% over the same period of 2012. Operating EBITDA increased by 12% to US$211m in the second quarter of 2013, from US$189m in the 2012 quarter.
In Cemex's Northern Europe region, net sales for the second quarter of 2013 decreased by 1% to US$1.09bn, compared with US$1.1bn in the second quarter of 2012. Operating EBITDA was US$108m, 11% down year-on-year. Second-quarter net sales in the Mediterranean region were US$400m, 4% higher compared with the US$384m taken during the second quarter of 2012. Operating EBITDA in this region decreased by 2% to US$94m.
Operations in Asia reported a 14% increase in net sales for the second quarter of 2013 at US$162m. Operating EBITDA for the quarter was US$38m, up by 29% from the same period in 2012.
China: Hebei Jintaicheng Building Materials Shareholding Co. has ordered a Loesche vertical roller mill from Loesche Mills (Shanghai) to grind granulated blast furnace slag.
Hebei Jintaicheng has ordered a LM 4600CS2 that will produce up to 90t/hr with 4500 Blaine. The mill drive will have a capacity of 3150kW. The contract was signed in December 2011, the components have been delivered and the mill is currently being installed.
Hebei Jintaicheng, a building materials processing private enterprise founded in 2009, is located in the industrial area of Baita County, Shahe City. The company produces and sells ground granulated blast furnace slag. The project has a planned output of 500,000t/yr of ground granulated blast furnace slag.
Cemargos net profit drops 79% in H1 2013
24 July 2013Colombia: Cementos Argos (Cemargos) has reported a year-on-year fall of 79.2% in net profits to US$38.9m for the first half of 2013. The Colombian cement producer attributed the decline to a sale of assets in the first half 2012 that had artificially inflated net profits.
Revenue for the first half of 2013 was US$1.24bn, a rise of 9% from US$1.2bn in the first half of 2012. Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) increased by 23% to US$261m from US$212m. In the first half of 2013 Cemargos shipped 5.5Mt of cement, a 1% year-on-year increase.
"The results reflect the positive trends being seen in our markets and the strategies of segmentation, price and penetration being implemented," said the company in its financial statement. Cemargos said that columes recovered in Colombia in the second quarter of 2013 and the Caribbean region continued to support growth.
Results from Saudi Arabia
18 July 2013Saudi Arabia: Saudi Cement Company has reported a 5.9% year-on-year increase in its second-quarter net profit. It identified a rise in local demand for cement as among the reasons for the improvement.The company posted a second-quarter net profit of US$81.7m compared to US$77.3m in the same period in 2012. Net profit for the first six months of 2013 was US$172.5m, a 5% rise compared to the first half of 2012.
Meanwhile, Yanbu Cement Co's first-half net profit rose by 44.7% year-on-year to US$138.9m, thanks to higher production and sales volumes supported by the start of its kiln line No 5 in 2012.