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San Miguel has big plans for Northern Cement 29 May 2013
Philippines: San Miguel Corporation has purchased a 35% stake in Northern Cement Corporation for US$72.1m and plans to finance the aggressive expansion of the company. San Miguel president Ramon Ang said the conglomerate would spend US$750m for the construction of new cement plants for Northern Cement, a company that is controlled by San Miguel chairman Eduardo Cojuangco.
Ang, who is also the chief of operations of San Miguel, said the company plans to expand the operation of Northern Cement by building three more plants at a cost of US$250m each.
Ang said that one plant would be built in the existing site in Pangasinan, another in Southern Luzon and a third in Cebu. Each plant will have a capacity of 2Mt/yr.
"All of these projects will happen within 2013 and are likely to be completed within two years," said Ang. "Eventually, San Miguel wants to build more plants to become the dominant cement manufacturing company in the Philippines." He added that Northern Cement aims to secure at least a 30% share of the cement market, which had 'huge potential.' "The revenue potential for each 2Mt/yr plant is estimated at US$200m/yr," he said.
Oman Cement admits probe on cement quality 29 May 2013
Oman: On 23 May 2012 Oman Cement Company (OCC) said that the Public Authority for Consumer Protection (PACP) has initiated an investigation on the quality of cement imported by the company. A team from PACP visited the company to inspect the cement imported and locally purchased for blending with its own cement, which the team considered to be a violation.
However, the company assured the team that the cement purchased after tender process is manufactured by reputable local and foreign cement companies according to the specifications better than the British-European and Omani standards and conform to high quality standard followed by OCC.
The clarification was in response to a newspaper report on deceptive commercial practices carried out by a company in importing 30,000t of 'inferior' quality cement, which was allegedly re-packed and sold as high quality product at a high price.
OCC also assured the authority that the cement purchased has been subjected to laboratory test and harmonising it with OCC-manufactured cement is undertaken with adherence to high quality standards.
"The purchase of cement, which amounts to about 30,000t and is hardly 1% of the annual capacity of the firm, had been necessitated due to breakdown of one of the cement mills of the company in April 2013," added OCC in a statement.
In a separate statement Raysut Cement sought to distance itself from the communication between OCC and the PACP.
Mexico: Grupo Cementos de Chihuahua has reported that it made a net loss of US$8.0m in the three months to 31 March 2013. While representing a loss, the loss was 9.9% lower than in the same period of 2012.
Its revenue was down by 2.7% year-on-year from US$116.5, to US$115.2m, while earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation took a 36.5% hit, falling from US$16.5m in the first quarter of 2012 to US$11.0m in the first quarter of 2013.
Pakistan: Gharibwal Cement Ltd (GCL) has shown an impressive increase of 447% in net profit for the third quarter of the current Pakistan fiscal year, which covered the three months to 31 March 2013.
The company made a net profit of US$1.81m compared to just US$330,500 in the three months to 31 March 2012. Net sales of the company were up by 17% to US$18.0m compared to US$15.3m during the year-earlier period.
Muhammad Rafique Khan, director of the company, said, "During the current nine month period cement industry achieved overall net volumetric growth of 4.9%. However, domestic sales volumes increased by 6.2% whereas export decreased by 1.2%."
He said that GCL's improved performance was due to increased sales volumes, improvement in net retention prices and continued efforts of the management to control costs. All these factors over a period of nine months enabled the company to increase its sales volume and sales revenue by 20% and 34% respectively.
During the period company operated at 47% of its installed capacity, which is better than the 39% capacity utilisation seen in the comparative period of 2012, although still very low. Keeping in view the continuous growth of cement dispatches, restructuring by major banks and financial institutions, stable selling prices and tight cost controls by the management, the company says that it will be able to perform better in the future.
Holcim renames Mexican unit 29 May 2013
Mexico: Swiss construction materials company Holcim's subsidiary Holcim Apasco will be renamed Holcim México. Holcim Latinoamérica's CEO Andreas Leu said that the move had been taken in order to "Unify the brand and strengthen its presence as a global leader in the Mexican market."
A slowdown in the Mexican construction industry has caused a 10% decline in cement demand in the country in the first three months of 2013, but the firm expects cement sales to increase by 1-2% in 2013, according to Holcim Mexico's CEO Eduardo Kretschmer.
"Mexico has great potential in the construction sector, as it is an emerging economy with strong macroeconomic fundamentals, a young population that in the coming years will demand more and better housing and infrastructure," said Kretschmer.