03 November 2015
The India Cements’ net profit grew almost five-fold in the second quarter of its 2016 fiscal year 03 November 2015
India: The India Cements Limited (ICL) has posted a nearly five-fold growth in its net profit for the second quarter of its 2016 fiscal year, which ended on 30 September 2015.
Its net profit grew from US$1.14m to US$6.26m in the second quarter of its 2016 fiscal year. Growth mainly stemmed from improved operating parameters and substantial reductions in variable costs. Its operating profit grew to US$35.4m from US$27.9m. Cement capacity utilisation was at 60% and is expected to rise.
According to Managing Director and Vice-Chairman of ICL, N Srinivasan, the last three quarters have seen the company posting consistent profits, a development that Srinivasan said had resulted in the company seeing better times ahead. "We have remained on the profit track for three consecutive quarters. Going forward, we see better times ahead. We had a tough time for two years and have achieved a turnaround by cutting costs and maintaining a healthy cement price," said Srinivasan. "With expected the increase in cement demand in the southern states and Andhra Pradesh building its new capital city Amaravati, we hope that the company will do well in the coming years."
Birla Corporation commissions cement blending unit in Uttar Pradesh 03 November 2015
India: Birla Corporation has commissioned its 50,000t/yr cement blending unit in Raebareli, Uttar Pradesh. In August 2015 it agreed to acquire, either directly or through its wholly-owned subsidiary, Lafarge India's Jojobera and Sonadih cement businesses for US$763m.
Rwanda delists Kilimanjaro Cement from preferential treatment 03 November 2015
Rwanda: Rwanda has delisted Kilimanjaro Cement produced by Amson's Tanzania Ltd from preferential treatment as part of its anti-dumping campaign to check external competition threatening the domestic market. However, Tanzania Ltd has appealed to the East African Community (EAC) committee on non-tariff barriers against the decision on Rwanda.
Rwanda, once a net importer of cement, is slowly building production capacity among local cement makers. Cimerwa and Kigali Cement have increased production capacity and will soon be able to supply local demand and also position the country to start exporting cement. Kilimanjaro Cement now attracts a 25% import duty like other goods imported from outside the EAC and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA).
Rwandan officials have alleged that Kilimanjaro Cement is imported from Pakistan and repackaged in local bags and so is not qualified to be treated as manufactured within the region. William Musoni, Commissioner Customs Services at the Rwanda Revenue Authority, said that before the government blacklisted Kilimanjaro cement, they had jointly carried out investigations with officials from the EAC Secretariat that confirmed that some of the cement exported from Tanzania is repackaged.
Lithuania: Eternit Baltic UAB, the corrugated fibre cement sheet plant operating in Naujoji Akmene in the north of Lithuania, has begun the construction of new production facilities. The new production facilities will produce Cedral cement siding for the local market and for the Central and Eastern European markets.
Etex, which owns Eternit Baltic UAB, plans to invest approximately Euro34m in the construction of the new production facilities. Implementation of the project will take a little more than one year. Production is expected to start in early 2017. The new production facilities will enable the company to produce over 4Mm2/yr of cement siding. Approximately 50 new jobs will be created in the new production facilities in three years. Eternit Baltic currently employs approximately 150 people.
Suez Cement reports 18% revenue fall in the third quarter of 2015 03 November 2015
Egypt: Suez Cement Group has reported that a much improved energy availability, driven by coal utilisation and a more steady supply of the heavy fuel oil known as mazut, has allowed the Egyptian cement industry to boost its production by 29% year-on-year in the third quarter of 2015 and 23% in the first nine months of 2015.
During the third quarter of 2015, market demand grew by 2.1%, while cement demand grew by 1.6% in the first nine months of 2015. Combined with a steep reduction in exports, this resulted in a marked oversupply of cement products in the domestic market, causing prices to decline. This trend was exacerbated in the third quarter of 2015 with a market demand slowed down by an unfavourable calendar and strong production activity in contrast with summer 2014, when energy supply was at its lowest. Simultaneously, traditional energy prices grew by around 30% with the implementation by the government of the subsidy lifting programme. Suez Cement was able to maintain its market leadership, but saw its sales volumes decline slightly as it tried to defend its pricing. Exports to regional markets, such as Libya and Yemen, remained limited because of political and economic instability.
Suez Cement reported an 18% decrease in revenues for the third quarter of 2015 and a 12% fall for the first nine months of the year. The company continued to implement its action plans to improve internal efficiencies and modify its energy mix, with two plants now fully converted to use coal and waste-derived fuel. The resulting cost improvement was insufficient to offset the impact from pricing, energy price and cost of labour increases.
Suez Cement expects Egypt's supply-demand imbalance and lower cement prices to remain negative for the rest of 2015. However, it foresees improved cement demand and rebounding prices in 2016. Egypt will move forward with the implementation of several large national projects under the auspices of government stimulation initiatives designed to boost demand for cement across the country.
Suez Cement is currently preparing for the implementation of coal conversion projects at the Helwan and Tourah plants in the next two years. The company's energy diversification programme is focused on increasing the use of waste-derived fuels, petroleum coke, coal and renewable energy in order to prevent fluctuating natural gas and mazut prices from negatively impacting the company's bottom line. Suez Cement anticipates that its energy programme will continue to improve its manufacturing capacity and decrease operational and production overheads.
Mexico’s Cemex closes Euro160m sale of Austrian and Hungarian units 03 November 2015
Europe: Cemex has completed the sale of its business operations in Austria and Hungary to Germany's Rohrdorfer Group for about Euro160m.
Cemex's Austrian operations, which comprise 24 aggregate quarries and 34 ready-mix plants, reported Euro219m in net sales in 2014. The operations in Hungary include five aggregate quarries and 34 ready-mix facilities and had net sales of some Euro42.7m in 2014.
Cemex hired Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, BNP Paribas and Morgan Stanley & Co International plc to act as financial advisors in this transaction. The proceeds from the sale will be used mainly to finance general corporate purposes and to pay off debt.