Displaying items by tag: Southwest Cement
China: China National Building Materials (CNBM) plans to increase its stake in Tianshan Cement to 88% from 46% as part of its restructuring drive. Tianshan Cement will acquire outright fellow CNBM subsidiaries China United Cement and Sinoma Cement. It will also acquire CNBM’s majority stakes in Southwest Cement and South Cement. The group says that it has completed the audit, evaluation and evaluation filing for the reorganisation. It follows an announcement in the summer of 2020 about the plan.
In a related transaction, Tianshan Cement said it had agreed to buy Jiangxi Wannianqing Cement’s 1.3% stake in South Cement. Reuters has reported that value of this deal as US$96.0m.
CNBM said that the restructuring is intended to, “promote the integration of high-quality resources, strengthen the company’s leading position in the cement industry and facilitate resolving industry competition among subsidiaries of the company in the cement business sector.”
CNBM consolidates its cement businesses
29 July 2020Consolidation of the Chinese cement industry looks set to take a major step forward this week. China National Building Material Company (CNBM) announced that it is restructuring its cement production assets and companies under one subsidiary, Tianshan Cement. The move is significant since CNBM is the world’s largest cement producer, with a production capacity of over 500Mt/yr. That’s more than the total output of any single country except China. It’s also between a quarter and a third of national capacity domestically.
Little information has been revealed except that it concerns most of CNBM’s cement producing subsidiaries. Namely: China United Cement, South Cement, North Cement, Southwest Cement and Sinoma Cement. Note that this leaves out Ningxia Building Materials and Qilianshan Holdings, although some commentators have suggested that they may be merged in later on. It was announced to stock markets as a proposal with a ‘letter of intent of cooperation’ exchanged between CNBM and Tianshan Cement. CNBM will remain the controlling shareholder of Tianshan Cement after the restructuring. However, the assets concerned - the cement companies are still being discussed and considered. The aim of the reorganisation is to ‘facilitate resolving industry competition’ among the subsidiaries of CNBM.
The move is expected to significantly increase operational efficiency at the cement companies as they start to act in a more coordinated manner. It also fits the government-requested drive for the industry as a whole to consolidate and follow supply-side reform initiatives by, hopefully, eliminating old production assets and other measures. Indeed as CNBM’s president Peng Shou said in the company’s report for 2019, “Production overcapacity of the industry has not been fundamentally resolved. The task of cutting production overcapacity was arduous, and the supply-side structural reform remains the major task.” The company says it is committed to building a three-pillar development platform of cement, new materials and engineering services.
How much more operational efficiency the world’s largest cement producer will need to do this is a key question. In 2019 the sales revenue from its cement business rose by 12% year-on-year to US$18.7bn and its earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) increased by 19% to US$5bn. Growth at this level is novel to western-based multinational cement producers! So the implication might be that CNBM is hoping to turbo-charge its financial performance before (or if) the serious government-forced supply side cuts occur or a general economic slowdown happens so that it can return to ‘normal’ Chinese performance afterwards.
The Chinese Cement Association presented a good overview of the history of CNBM that you can read here. The quick version is that it’s the embodiment of the Chinese government’s desire to build and merge its cement industry since 2005. The latest restructuring with Tianshan Cement is the latest chapter in this 15 year story. What the reorganisation means internationally is ‘probably not much’ in the short term. Better coordination between CNBM’s cement companies could have implications in the longer term if they acted together on an international strategy, such as a strategy on exports for example, or if group-wide suppliers were agreed upon.
That’s all on China but finally if readers were not able to join us for Global Cement Live last week on 23 July 2020, we recommend watching the playback of Arif Bashir, Director (Technical/Operations) of DG Khan Cement Nishat Group Pakistan. He gave a great overview of Pakistan’s cement industry and the challenges it is facing and overcoming. Be sure to tune in for this week’s guest speaker, Regina Krammer from Loesche who will be discussing how the coronavirus crisis will change communications in the sector.
To register for Global Cement Live visit: www.globalcement.com/live
China: China National Building Materials (CNBM) has shared plans for a restructuring. Under the new arrangement, its subsidiary Tianshan Cement will take control of China United Cement, North Cement, Sinoma Cement, South Cement, Southwest Cement and CNBM Investment. The reorganisation awaits internal negotiations and finalisation and regulatory approval.
China: CNBM and France’s Fives have signed a cooperation agreement related to the Paris Agreement regarding climate change and the modernisation of CNBM’s plants. CNBM was represented by both Ma Mingliang, vice-president of China Building Materials Engineering Group and Wang Kedong, chief executive officer’s (CEO) assistant of Zhonglian Cement, and Fives was represented by Didier Bourbon, Sales Vice-President (Asia) of Fives FCB. This agreement includes the supply of the FCB Horomill grinding technology developed by Fives FCB for both CNBM’s overseas projects and domestic projects such as Zhonglian Cement and Southwest Cement projects. The signing ceremony took place at the 7th Sino-French Industrial Cooperation Forum held in Chongqing. The agreement follows a similar deal struck in April 2019 in Paris.
CNBM’s cement production drops due to poor demand and environmental regulations in first half of 2018
28 August 2018China: China National Building Material’s (CNBM) cement production volume fell by 5% year-on-year to 143Mt in the first half of 2018 from 150Mt in the same period in 2017. It has attributed this decrease to ‘flat’ demand, increased pressure on environmental protection and rising costs of fuel and raw materials. As part of its ‘Price – Cost – Profit’ (PCP) initiative the group has focused on reducing production capacity and output, implementing peak shifting production and eliminating old production facilities.
Despite the headwinds, the group’s sales revenue from its cement division rose by 22% to US$7.41bn from US$6.06bn. Its adjusted earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) increased by 38% to US$2.08bn from US$1.51bn. Average cement prices also rose year-on-year. External sales from its engineering companies increased by 13% to US$2.18bn from US$1.92bn. Overall, group sales revenue rose by 22% to US$14bn from US$11.5bn.
CNBM completed its merger with China National Materials Company (Sinoma) on 2 May 2018. Its cement producing subsidiaries include China Untied, South Cement, North Cement, Southwest Cement, Sinoma Cement, Tianshan Cement, Ningxia Building Materials and Qilianshan. Its engineering subsidiaries include Sinoma International, China Triumph and Sinoma Milling.
CNBM increases majority share in Southwest Cement
21 June 2018China: China National Building Material (CNBM) has agreed to buy a further 18.7% stake in Southwest Cement for US$295m from Zhonshai Trust. The building materials producer already owns a 70% majority stake in its subsidiary. The remaining stake in Southwest Cement is owned by Shanghai Zhentong (6.3%) and Beijing Huachen (5%).
China: China National Building Material Company’s (CNBM) sales revenue rose by 1% year-on-year to US$14.8bn in 2016 from US$14.6bn in 2015. Its profit rose by 1% to US$410m from US$406m. The group’s sales of cement and clinker grew by 4.2% to 291Mt in 2016. Despite earlier reporting falls in operating revenue and profit of over 5% for the first nine months of 2016 the cement producer attributed the turnaround to production efficiencies and adherence to state-mandated supply-side reforms. It added that despite a ‘grim’ national economy the cement sector underwent a ‘weak’ recovery as reforms kicked in leading to growth in cement prices.