
Displaying items by tag: China
West China Cement profit collapses by 65% in first-half
17 August 2012China: West China Cement's net profit has fallen by 64.6% to US$23.4m in the first half of 2012. The cement producer's revenue dropped by 7.2% to US$250m in the same period.
Yet West China Cement expects better profits and revenue in the second half of 2012 as production capacity rises by up to 50%. "Our production costs will go down as our scale increases," said company chairman Zhang Jimin. "Our gross margin will rise in the second half. With selling prices and sales volume rising, our profits and revenue will increase." Zhang added that the company's cement sales would be boosted by infrastructure projects in Shaanxi province, including the Datong-Xian high-speed-rail project and the second Xian-Ankang rail project.
On 8 August 2012 US 'short seller' Glaucus Research Group accused West China Cement of fraud, inflated profits and suspicious acquisitions. West China Cement executive director Low Po Ling said that her company was consulting its lawyers and that is had reserved the right to take legal action against Glaucus. Low said that since the Glaucus report came out, Italcementi Group, West China Cement's third-biggest shareholder, had held discussions three or four times with the mainland company. "Italcementi was very unhappy. It will issue a statement," said Low.
China Resources Cement's H1 profit slumps by 69%
15 August 2012China: China Resources Cement Holdings (CRC) has reporting a sharp fall in earnings and profit margins for the first half of 2012, dragged down by weaker demand. Despite turnover rising by 9.8% to US$1.42bn for the six months ending 30 June 2012, the company's net profit slumped by 68.9% to US$81.9m over the same period due to sliding selling prices.
CRC has attributed its poor performance to a number of factors including sluggish demand caused by weakened economy and poor weather conditions in the southern part of China, which led to accumulation of inventory as well as a series of price cuts. CRC expects prices to pick up in the fourth quarter of 2012 due to several large infrastructure projects, including resumed construction of railway networks and on-going affordable home-building drives.
More disappointing half year results for China
25 July 2012China: Henan Tongli Cement Co Ltd, a Shenzhen-listed cement producer, said that its first half 2012 net profit rose by 8.6% year-on-year to US$15.2m. Its operating revenue dipped by 2.8% year-on-year to US$308m.
Meanwhile China Tianrui Group Cement Co Ltd, a Henan Province-based clinker and cement producer, said that it booked US$42.7m in net profit in the first five months of 2012, a plunge of 43% year-on-year. Its revenue dipped by nearly 6% year-on-year to US$485m.
Chinese producers announce more profit slumps
11 July 2012China: Following on from other Chinese cement producers, which have reported large slumps in their half year profits, Xinjiang Tianshan Cement Co Ltd, based in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, has announced a first half net profit of US$18.9m, a drop of '60-80%' year-on-year.
The company stated that the decline in its half-year net profit is largely due to lower cement selling prices and rising financial expenditure. Other companies have stated that rising costs have included higher fuel prices, although this was not specified by Xinjiang Tianshan.
Meanwhile China's Sichaun Province announced that its cement sector had seen a near-60% plunge in its profitability in the five months to 31 May 2012, despite an 11% improvement in revenue in the entire building materials sector in that Province.
In addition the Hong Kong-listed Taiwan Cement International Holdings Ltd., has also warned that its net profit will decline by an estimated 50% year-on-year in the first half of 2012 due to China's strict macroeconomic controls and shrinking budgets for infrastructure projects.
TCC International reported that its net profit for the first half of 2011 was US$120.23m, although the corresponding figure for the first half of 2012 is likely to have dropped to less than US$60m.
While the slumps in profit have been dramatic, producers believe that they may be short-lived. China's cement market is expected to pick up at the end of the third quarter or early in the fourth quarter of 2012 as the country relaxes its macroeconomic controls, loosens its monetary policy and will give more rapid approval to infrastructure projects.
Update - 13 July 2012: Jiangxi Wannianqing Cement Co Ltd has announced that its first half net profit will plummet by about 80% year-on-year to US$8.5-9.9m.
4Mt/yr plant enters commissioning
11 July 2012China: Two kilns at a plant owned by Taiwan Cement (Anshun) have entered commissioning. The plant, which is located in Chengguan Town, in the Anshun region is one of the key projects of Guizhou Province and adds to the rapidly-growing new capacity being set up in China to replace older and less efficient plants.
The 4Mt/yr project will be fitted with low-temperature combined heat and power facilities, which are expected to produce around 130 million kWh. The project is expected to generate over 800 employment opportunities and will greatly promote economic growth in the local area.
Chinese halftime profit warning
04 July 2012Cement industry results from China have all told an alarming story this week: profits for the first half of 2012 look set to fall by more than 50% year-on-year.
China Resources Cement Holdings warned that its first-half earnings were down sharply. China National Materials Co. Ltd. (Sinoma), the cement equipment and engineering services provider, and Gansu Qilianshan Cement, a small Shanghai-listed cement producer, have both forecast similar drops. Sinoma blamed its drop in profit partly on an overseas project but 'interestingly' no further information was released detailing which project.
Previous to this in June 2012 Anhui Conch Cement warned that its net profit would fall by more than 50% due to weak demand and falling product prices. In May 2012 China National Building Material Co Ltd (CNBM) reported that its net profit for the first quarter of 2012 was down by 45% year-on-year. In April 2012 Jidong Cement reported an increase in its net loss for the first quarter and a year-on-year revenue drop of 14%.
Each of the Chinese big players in the cement industry have issued profit warnings of a similar scale suggesting that the Chinese market faces a uniform downturn or that a slowdown is being centrally managed. Official signs that the Chinese industry faced a slowdown emerged in March 2012 when the national growth target was lowered, analysts' predictions were released forecasting weakened profits for the nation's main producers and government officials admitted that overcapacity loomed within five years.
According to OneStone Research data on the Chinese market in 2010 CNBM, Anhui Conch, Jidong and Sinoma represented over 20% of Chinese capacity. To give these figures some perspective, in 2011 CNBM's profit was US$1.7bn. Holcim's operating profit for the same period was US$2bn and Lafarge's operating income was US$2.74bn. Even halved, CNBM's profit is a massive figure for a company with less of an international presence than the European multinationals.
Sinoma forecasts massive drop in net profit
04 July 2012China Resources shares feel the slowdown
28 June 2012China: Shares in China Resources Cement Holdings fell by as much as 5% on the Hong Kong stock-exchange today after the cement maker warned of a sharp fall in first-half earnings. Its losses demonstrate that weaknesses in the world's second-largest economy are starting to hit corporate profits. An increasing number of companies are feeling the pinch of a slowdown in consumer demand and the economy as a whole.
China's central bank cut its policy rates in June 2012 for the first time since the onset of the global financial crisis because economic data for April and May 2012 suggested that growth was weakening more than previously thought.
Yesterday, Gansu Qilianshan Cement, a small Shanghai-listed cement producer, forecast that its net profit would decrease by at least 50% year-on-year in the first half of 2012. In the first half of 2011 it made a net profit of US$38.9m.
Timken supplies bearings for CITIC mill
30 May 2012China: Timken Company has supplied bearings for one of China's largest vertical slag mills, featuring a 5.7m grinding table. The mill, one of several now utilising Timken bearings, was developed by CITIC Heavy Industries Co Ltd, one of China's top manufacturers of cement-producing equipment. According to CITIC, the new vertical slag mill produced by CITIC is expected to produce up to 1.2Mt/yr of ground slag for inclusion in cement and concrete products.
"Many sizable construction projects underway across China require large amounts of quality concrete," said Leong Fang, president of Timken China. "We work closely with CITIC and other customers in this important industry to make sure they can meet the growing demands of their customers for concrete and other construction materials. Our recent success is a testimony to teamwork and innovation for the two companies."
CRH set to build on stake in China
16 May 2012China: Irish building materials group CRH has said at its annual meeting that it planned to increase its stake in the Yatai cement business in China to 49% from 26% as part of a wider push into emerging markets.
Chief Executive Myles Lee said CRH was preparing to exercise an option, opening in January 2013, to raise the stake. "We are setting the scene at the moment for that and we are keen to increase that stake. Obviously in everything valuation is key, so it has to be at a valuation that makes sense for our shareholders," Lee said.