Displaying items by tag: Results
Lucky out-performs peers at end of 2012
29 January 2013Pakistan: Lucky Cement Limited has outperformed its competition by recording a 42.2% rise in its half-year profit for the year 2012-13. It has declared a profit for the half-year ending on (31 December 2012) of US$43.9m.The company's gross profit increased by 32.3% during the half-year as its net sales revenue improved by 13.9% to US$179.3m.
During the period under review, the combined sales revenue of Lucky Cement increased by 13.9%. This was attributed to a 21.3% growth in domestic sales and a 3.7% growth in exports.
To enhance the quality of cement and for capturing new export markets, Lucky Cement plans to replace its existing cement grinding mills from Chinese suppliers located at the Karachi plant with vertical mills from European suppliers. This replacement will reduce the cost of production due to more energy efficient operations.
Indian producer records loss in three months to December 2012
25 January 2013India: Prism Cement has reported a loss of US$10.1m for the quarter ending 31 December 2012, due to poor demand for the building material, high power and raw material costs. The firm, which has also has interests ready- mix-concrete and tiles as well as cement, had made a US$4.3m net profit in the October-December quarter of 2011. Prism's net sales fell as expenses rose.
"Poor demand, weak government spending on infrastructure kept prices of cement under pressure in the quarter," said Prism in a presentation to investors. "Coupled with higher power,freight and raw material costs, realisations have been adversely impacted. The markets are expected to improve and stabilise during the last quarter of the financial year."
Improving picture for Oman Cement as UAE imports slacken
24 January 2013Oman: Oman Cement Co has recorded a 36.7% rise in its net profit from US$33.2m in 2011 to US$45.5m in 2012. It reported that its total revenue rose by 17% to US$154m in 2012 from US$131.7m in 2011. However, total expenditure also rose in 2012 by 9.4% to US$102.8m from US$94m in 2011.
It is expected that Oman will see good demand for cement in 2013 due to government spending on infrastructure projects and increased construction activity. Analysts expect no increase in imports. Cement producers in the sultanate have faced tough competition over the last few years from UAE suppliers who sell cement in large quantities at lower prices in Oman.
Sameer Kattiparambil of EFG-Hermes, said, "The growth in net profit is mostly volume driven with some recovery in local cement prices. Owing to the fact that no major extra cement is being imported, prices have stabilised in the market over the last quarters."
"Since export prices have gone up, there has not been much addition to the profits of UAE exporters. Imports will continue to a limited extent but there will be no major increase. Oman Cement is working up to 96% of its capacity, so in the future, there is not much room for volume-driven growth," Kattiparambil added.
UltraTech profit down by 3%
23 January 2013India: UltraTech Cement, an Aditya Birla Group company, has reported a net profit of US$112m for the last three months of 2012, a drop of 3% compared to US$115m in the same period in 2011. The company blamed subdued demand and higher costs caused by increases in railway freight and diesel prices. Net sales for the quarter rose by 6% to US$904m from US$850m.
During the quarter, UltraTech reported that imported coal cost around US$100/t but that the benefit of this low price was partly offset by the depreciation in the Indian Rupee. New clinker plants at Chhattisgarh and Karnataka are expected to be operational by early 2013-2014 and will add 9.2Mt/yr to UltraTech's capacity. Once completed UltraTech's total capacity will reach 62Mt/yr.
In its outlook, the company said that the surplus scenario in the industry is likely to continue over the next three years. "Input costs are likely to increase in line with general inflation with margins remaining range bound,'' the company said.
Cement profit down by 24% for Shree Cement in Q2
23 January 2013India: Shree Cement has reported a fall in profit for its cement business of 24% to US$34m in the last three months of 2012 from US$45m in the same period in 2011. Total income for the company's cement business fell by 6% to US$207m from US$221m.
Since Shree Cement's previous financial year ending on 30 June 2012 lasted 15 months, figures for the six month period to 31 December 2012 were derived by aggregating the quarters ending 30 September 2011 and 31 December 2012. For the half year to 31 December 2012, Shree Cement reported a gain in income for its cement business of 19% to US$428m in 2012 from US$359m. Profits for the cement business for the half year rose by 24% to US$77m from US$62m.
Overall the Indian cement producer's financial results were bolstered by the company's power business. It reported a rise in net profit of 267% to US$40.5m in the last three months of 2012 from US$11m in the same period in 2011. Its total income increase by 20% to US$271m from US$226m.
Saudi Cement profits rise 31.4% in Q4
16 January 2013Saudi Arabia: Saudi Cement Co has reported a 31.4% rise in its fourth quarter profit due to higher local demand, the company reported in a bourse statement. The cement producer made a net profit of US$74m in the fourth quarter of 2012 compared to US$56.4m in the same period in 2011. Its operating profit rose by 36.8% to US$80.2m from US$58.7m.
Jiangxi Cement expects net profit down by up to 70% in 2012
16 January 2013China: Jiangxi Wannianqing Cement, a Shenzhen-listed producer of cement and clinker, has estimated that the company's net profit has decreased by 60-70% year-on-year in 2012 compared to a net profit of US$81.4m in 2011. The company made the announcement in a performance forecast that was released on 14 January 2012.
Vietnam: Vietnam's cement sales in 2012 reportedly fell by 3.5% to 54Mt due to low demand in the domestic market, according to the Vietnam Cement Association (VNCA). The country's cement sales in its domestic market fell by 7.71% year-on-year to 45.5Mt. Cement and clinker exports rose by 30% to 8.5Mt.
In 2012 local cement makers faced many difficulties such as large inventories and low domestic demand created by a static real estate market. High production costs, high lending interest rates and high input costs for materials such as fuel, power and coal all adversely affected local cement producers. Cement and clinker exports have also been disrupted due to some firms 'unfairly' cutting their export prices.
For 2013 the VNCA has predicted that local cement producers will continue to face difficulties. However the government has approved spending of US$480m on new rural constructions and will encourage the use of local cement for transportation infrastructure projects. Vietnam's domestic cement sales are predicted to rise by 5-8% year-on-year to 48-49Mt in 2013, equal to the total sales seen in 2011.
Deputy Minister of Construction Nguyen Tran Nam said that the local cement sector must focus on dealing with three main problems: export promotion, production cost reduction and enterprise restructure. He also called on local cement companies to cooperate on exports instead of undercutting each other.
Pakistan exports fall by 5% for first half of 2012-2013
09 January 2013Pakistan: Cement exports from Pakistan have fallen by 5.28% to 4.22Mt, according to figures on the first six months of the 2012-2013 financial year from the All Pakistan Cement Manufacturers Association (APCMA). However domestic cement sales increased by 7.61% to 11.7Mt in the same period. The Pakistan financial year runs from 1 July until 30 June.
A statement from the APCMA revealed that cement plants in the south of the country grew by 7.98% in the local market but posted even higher declines of 16.3% for exports. In the north, where the majority of the country's cement capacity of located, the industry posted a growth of 7.52% in domestic sales whilst exports declined by 1.31%.
The APCMA added that hype created on trade with India has so far not materialised and export in that market was only 0.209Mt during the last six months, a decline of 40.41% and a result well below the expectation of the cement sector. The APCMA spokesman blamed 'stringent non tariff barriers' from India.
During the last six months, the adjacent Afghanistan market remained stable and cement sector exported 2.41Mt. Exports to other destination through sea excluding India also remained stable in comparison with the last six months of 2011-12.
Saudi producers report profit growth in 2012
08 January 2013Saudi Arabia: Two of Saudi Arabia's largest cement producers, Yamama and Yanbu, have reported a growth in their profits in 2012.
Yanbu Cement announced a net profit of US$192m for 2012, an increase of 36.1% compared to 2011. The company said that such a performance had been made possible as a result of improved sales and the opening of a fifth production line part way through the year. The company also saw a 32.7% year-on-year increase in its fourth quarter sales to US$54.1m.
Yamama Cement revealed that its full-year net profits for 2012 increased by 11% to US$218m. However in the fourth quarter of the year its profits fell by 9% year-on-year to US$46.4m. The company blamed the lower sale prices achieved during the fourth quarter before the decline was reached.
A recent report by the National Commercial Bank (NCB) said that demand for cement in Saudi Arabia remains strong, with ongoing projects set to sustain growth for several years to come. It forecasted growth in market demand with a rate of 8.2% predicted in 2013 as demand reaches 56Mt. In the longer term NCB predictions expect continued demand growth of 6.3%/yr until 2015.
Yanbu is likely to benefit from any significant growth in demand, as it has three lines with a combined capacity of 1.3Mt/yr currently sitting idle. Predictions that this growth in demand will be disproportionately stronger in the western region could well yield another successful year to come in 2013.