Displaying items by tag: GCW87
Raysut Cement's gains by 64% to US$63.7m in 2012
13 February 2013Oman: Raysut Cement Company, the Sultanate's biggest cement producer, has announced a 64.1% growth in net profit to US$63.7m for 2012, compared to US$38.8m for 2011. The company said its revenue also moved up to US$241m from US$216m, while cost of sales was edged up to US$163m from US$161m.
"A net profit of US$20m for the fourth quarter was higher than our estimate of US$15.3m, as Raysut booked an investment gain of US$3.53m. Excluding this investment gain, the recurring net profit was only 8% above our estimate," said EFG Hermes in a research note. The note added that Raysut expects stable to moderate increases in cement prices and solid year-on-year volume growth to be sustained, backed by infrastructure developments in Oman.
UNICEM to double cement capacity to 5Mt/yr by 2016
13 February 2013Nigeria: Flour Mills of Nigeria plans to borrow up to US$500m to finance a 2.5Mt/yr upgrade at its 2.5Mt/yr UNICEM joint venture cement plant in Calabar, according to its chief finance officer. Flour Mills operates in the Nigerian cement market as Burham Cement and it shares its joint venture with Holcim and Lafarge.
In an interview with Reuters, Jacques Vauthier announced that the conglomerate had appointed financial advisers and banks to raise a term loan from the local market for the construction of the plant. He said that the details of the loan were still being finalised. The new cement plant will be completed by the first quarter of 2016.
Vauthier acknowledged the cement glut in 2012 and blamed it on cheap imports from Asia. He added that sales were picking up again and he expected its cement subsidiary Unicem to end 2013 with a year-on-year growth rate that is in double-digits.
This news story was updated on 11 November 2013 with the exisiting capacity of the UNICEM cement plant
Loesche announces orders for Sinoma and Dangote in Africa
13 February 2013Nigeria: German vertical roller mill (VRM) producer Loesche GmbH has been awarded a contract for five new VRMs from China's Sinoma International Engineering, which is building a two kiln extension to the existing Dangote Cement Ibese plant. Loesche previously delivered equipment for the first and second lines at the same plant.
The five VRMs to be supplied are two 450t/hr Loesche Mill Type LM69.9 mills for raw material and three 310t/hr cement LM 63.3+3C cement mills. As with previous work at Ibese, the high moisture of the material of up to 20%, the sticky nature of the raw material and the low grindability of the raw material represent special challenges for the project.
In addition to the mills and the mill motors, Loesche will deliver metal detectors and hopper discharge feeders. The supply of the equipment will be split between Loesche, which is supplying key parts, and a Chinese-manufactured portion arranged by Sinoma International under supervision of Loesche. Delivery is scheduled at the end of 2013.
Ethiopia: Sinoma has also announced that it has contracted Loesche as the sole supplier of grinding technology for the construction of the Menagasha grinding plant, which is being constructed by Dangote. Delivery will be in early 2014.
Four Loesche mills will be included in the process; a 450t/hr LM 69.6 for raw material grinding, a 50t/hr LM 28.3D for coal grinding and two LM53.3+3C mills will be used for grinding clinker additives such as gypsum, limestone and pumice.
In addition to the mills and the mill motors, Loesche will deliver metal detectors and mill rotary feeders. The supply is a split-up of Loesche key parts and a Chinese manufactured portion arranged by Sinoma International under supervision of Loesche.
Both the plant elevation of 2600m above sea level and the very poor grindability of the cement raw material represents a special challenge for the layout of the grinding equipment in this case.
Jaiprakash quarterly net profit slumps by 64% to US$20.6m
12 February 2013India: Jaiprakash Associates has reported a more than 64% decline in standalone net profit at US$20.6m for its third quarter, which ended on 31 December 2012, as its interest burden increased by over 20%. For comparison, the Noida-based company had a net profit of US$57.4m in the third quarter of the 2011-2012 fiscal year.
Its net sales, however, were up by 15.3% to US$629.5m during the quarter compared to US$545.9m in the October-December period of the 2012 fiscal year. Revenues from the cement segment were up by nearly 7% to US$273.2m.
The company's total expenditure of US$521.8m amounted to nearly 83% of its net sales during the quarter. Its interest outgoings increased by 20.7% to US$98.7m. Its other income, mainly interest on deposits, also declined by nearly 36% to US$15.8m, impacting the company's financial results for the quarter.
New Zimbabwe plant for PPC
11 February 2013Zimbabwe/Mozambique: South African cement manufacturer PPC's (Pretoria Portland Cement) Zimbabwean subsidiary, Portland Holdings Limited (PHL), is to build a new cement plant in the country to service its markets in Zimbabwe and Mozambique. The new plant will produce about 1Mt/yr of cement and will work alongside a separate grinding facility being constructed in Tete in Mozambique.
"In recent years our investment in Zimbabwe has show strong growth on the back of a more buoyant and stable economy," said PPC's chief executive officer, Ketso Gordhan. "This, together with the fact that PPC has received an indigenisation certificate, makes us optimistic about the future of the economy and the country as a whole."
"The construction of additional cement capacity will ensure that PPC continues to be a key player in the development of infrastructure in Zimbabwe and neighbouring countries," added Gordhan. "It is totally in line with our stated strategy of growing our non-South African revenue from the current 21% to at least 40% by 2016.
"Not only will this investment address the expected future increase in cement demand in Zimbabwe but create employment opportunities, beneficiation of the country's mineral reserves and a significant growth opportunity for our indigenisation partners," said PHL's managing director, Zak Limbada.
Cemex shows signs of recovery in 2012 but sales fall
08 February 2013Mexico: Mexican building materials company Cemex has declared 2012 to have been a year of 'recovery' with the announcement of rising earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) and rising operating earnings. EBITDA rose by 10% to US$2.62bn from US$2.37bn. Net operating earnings before other expenses rose by 35% to US$1.31bn from US$0.97bn. However, net sales fell by 2% to US$15bn in 2012 from US$15.2bn in 2011.
"During the year we achieved the highest EBITDA generation and operating EBITDA margin since 2009 and the fourth quarter was the sixth consecutive quarter with a year-over-year EBITDA increase. We are particularly pleased with the quarterly performance of our operations in the United States and the South, Central America and Caribbean and Asia regions," said Fernando A González, Executive Vice President of Finance and Administration. Cemex said that infrastructure and residential sectors were the main drivers of demand in most of its markets.
For the fourth quarter of 2012 Cemex's performance was more muted. Net sales remained static year-on-year at US$3.71bn. EBITDA rose by 13% to US$611m from US$540m. Net operating earnings before other expenses rose by 26% to US$285m from US$227m.
Cemex produced 65.8Mt of cement in 2012, a 1% decrease from 66.8Mt in 2011. This drop was more pronounced in the fourth quarter. Cemex produced 15.8Mt in the fourth quarter of 2012, a 3% decrease from 16.3Mt in 2011.
By region, net sales in Mexico decreased by 3% to US$3.38bn in 2012 from US$3.47bn in 2011. In the fourth quarter sales increased by 2% year-on-year. In the US sales increased by 17% to US$3.06bn from US$2.62bn. In Northern Europe sales fell by 13% to US$4.1bn from US$4.73bn, led by a 15% decline in Poland. In Cemex's Mediterranean region sales fell by 15% to US$1.46bn form US$1.72bn, led by a 40% decline in Spain. Operations in South, Central America and the Caribbean reported an increase in sales of 20% to US$2.09bn from US$1.75bn. In Asia sales rose by 7% to US$542m from US$505m, with the Philippines performing well with 12% growth.
HeidelbergCement reports 8% year-on-year revenue rise
07 February 2013Germany: The German multinational cement giant HeidelbergCement has announced preliminary financial results for the fourth quarter of 2012 and for the full year. In the fourth quarter it saw its revenue rise by 6.5% year-on-year to Euro3.5bn, its operating income before depreciation increased by 8.2% to Euro691m.
Over the whole of 2012 the group saw its revenue increase by 8.7% relative to 2011, rising to Euro14bn. Its operating income rose by 9.5% to Euro1.61bn. HeidelbergCement reported that it owed improvements in its cement margins to its cash-saving 'FOX 2013' programme, which saved outgoings of Euro384m.
The improvements reflect the continuing positive development in HeidelbergCement's growth markets and the ongoing recovery in North America. Sales volumes and result declined in Europe, mainly as a result of government budget constraints in some countries, which led to significant reductions in infrastructure spending.
"We are pleased that we achieved our goal of increasing revenue and operating income despite the negative impact of the Euro crisis on many countries in Europe," said Dr Bernd Scheifele, CEO of HeidelbergCement. "Once again we could reap the benefit from our advantageous geographical positioning in growth markets and the successful continuation of our programmes for efficiency and margin improvement. The margins in the core businesses cement and aggregates continued to increase. The strong development in our markets in Asia, Africa and North America contributed to the positive margin development."
In western and northern Europe the business development was not supported by mild weather at the beginning and the end of the year, which had been the case in 2011. Nevertheless, demand for construction materials remained stable in HeidelbergCement's native Germany and northern Europe, driven by positive economic development. In contrast, construction activity in the UK and the Netherlands weakened noticeably, mainly as a result of lower infrastructure spending in the UK due to budget consolidation and the decline in residential construction in the Netherlands following the end of housing subsidy programmes. Revenues here were Euro4.2bn, a decrease of 2.7% over 2011. Cement, clinker and ground granulated blast-furnace slag (GGBFS) sales came to 21.3Mt, a 3.9% decrease compared to 2011.
The development in the group's Eastern Europe-Central Asia region was divided. While cement sales volumes and prices developed positively in Russia and Central Asia, the demand for construction materials declined significantly in Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic as a result of budget consolidation measures in these countries and the completion of construction projects related to the 2012 European Football Championship in Poland and Ukraine. Overall, cement, clinker and GGBFS sales volumes increased slightly to 17.2Mt, a 1% year-on-year increase. Revenues across all business activities in this region came to Euro1.44bn.
In North America demand for cement and ready-mixed concrete continued its recovery in 2012, driven especially by an increase in residential construction. Cement, clinker and GGBFS sales volumes recorded growth of 11.7%, rising to 11.7Mt. However, the group's result in the fourth quarter of 2012 was affected by Hurricane Sandy and an early winter start in Canada. In this region its revenue came to Euro3.44bn, a 13.4% increase year-on-year.
In the group's Asia-Pacific region, Demand for all of its products remained very strong due to construction activities that were supported by economic growth across the region. As a consequence, revenue showed growth of 17.6% for the full year and 12.8% for the fourth quarter. This rose to Euro3.48bn for the whole of 2012. Meanwhile, cement, clinker and GGBFS sales rose by 3.9% to 30.0Mt.
In HeidelbergCement's Africa-Mediterranean Basin region, cement, clinker and GGBFS sales were up by 0.9% to 9.2Mt. Revenues increased by 11% year-on-year to Euro1.135bn. The group noted particular improvements in its key markets of Ghana and Tanzania.
With regards to its progress in 2013 HeidelbergCement cited the IMF's expectations for slightly improved global economic growth, presumably linking this directly to demand for building materials. It cautioned that this growth was dependent on the continued focus of North America and Europe on their respective debt crises. There are still risks for the global economy from armed conflicts in the Middle East.
In North America, the company expects a continuing economic recovery and consequently a further increased demand for building materials, especially from residential construction and the raw materials industry. In Europe and Central Asia, HeidelbergCement anticipates divided development. While markets in Germany, Northern Europe, Russia and Central Asia should remain stable or continue to grow, weak economic development and low demand for building materials is expected in all other regions. In Asia and Africa the company expects sustained demand.
"Due to the continuing strong economic growth in the emerging markets and the recovery in the USA we are cautiously confident for the future," said Bernd Scheifele. "Macroeconomic risks have recently eased but still remain significant. The need for countries to deleverage will likely dampen volume growth in mature markets for the foreseeable future. In addition, we still have not recovered the margin loss from massively increasing energy costs over the past years. Therefore, we will unabatedly continue our efforts to reduce costs and improve efficiency and will continue to right-size capacities where necessary."
Eagle Materials revenue up by a third as cement sales rise
07 February 2013US: The US-based building materials provider Eagle Materials has reported financial results for the third quarter of the 2013 fiscal year, which ended on 31 December 2012. These showed that its revenue was up by 33% compared to the same period of the prior fiscal year. Earnings per share were up by 429% year-on-year.
Eagle's third quarter sales volumes improved across all business lines, with sales prices improving in all but one of it business lines. Operating earnings from its cement operations for the quarter came to US$16.6m, a 7% increase from the same quarter a year ago. Cement revenues for the quarter, including joint venture and inter-segment revenues, totalled US$74.9m, 22% greater than the same quarter of the previous year. Cement sales volumes for the quarter were 0.82Mt, 17% above the same quarter a year ago.
On November 30, 2012, Eagle completed its previously announced acquisition of Lafarge North America's Sugar Creek, Missouri and Tulsa, Oklahoma cement plants, as well as related assets. Eagle used cash proceeds from an equity offering completed on 3 October 2012, along with borrowings under its bank credit facility to fund the purchase.