Displaying items by tag: China
Jidong Cement profit tumbles by 88% to US$29m in 2012
17 April 2013China: Tangshan Jidong Cement reported a net profit of US$29.1m in 2012, a drop of 88.2% year-on-year according to a company statement. Operating revenue fell by 7.1% year-on-year to US$2.36bn. Jidong Cement plans to increase its production of cement by 20% in 2013 to 72Mt.
China cement output grows 8.2% to 417Mt in Q1
15 April 2013China: Output of cement in China reached 417Mt in the first quarter of 2013, a rise of 8.2% year-on-year according to data issued by the National Bureau of Statistics of China. Cement output in March 2013 grew by 6.9% year-on-year to 187Mt.
In a separate formal announcement China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology informed the provinces that 73.5Mt of obsolete cement production capacity will be eliminated in 2013.
India/China: Sinoma International Engineering (Hong Kong) Co Ltd, part of the National Materials Group (Sinoma), has entered the Indian cement equipment production industry with the acquisition of a major stake in LNV Technology Pvt Ltd, based in Chennai, India for US$23.9m.
According to the agreement, Sinoma International Engineering now has a 68% share in LNV Technology, which has become a member of the Sinoma Group. The earlier joint venture partners V C Rao, managing director of the company and LV Technology Public Co Ltd, retain around 16% equity each. Liu Zhijiang, group chairman of Sinoma said that the Chinese firm would bring in its expertise in research and development, design, manufacturing, installation and after sales service to the Indian joint venture. With the venture, LNV Technology expects to be the leading supplier of cement equipment in India in the next five years.
Rao said that LNV Technology would look at setting up engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) capabilities, which are not prevalent in the Indian cement equipment industry. "Sinoma is the only company in the world to do this kind of EPC in the segment. That model is not available in India now, which will be brought in through LNV Technology," he said. Globally 80% of the cement equipment market is cornered by just four companies: Sinoma International, FLSmidth, Polysius AG and KHD.
Henan Tongli expects up to 99.6% profit slide
10 April 2013China: Following a recent trend for declining profits in the Chinese cement sector, Henan Tongli Cement Co Ltd has announced that it expects to record a poor performance for the first quarter of 2013. It says that its net profit will drop by 88.5-99.6% year-on-year to between US$16,100 and US$484,000 in the first quarter of 2013.
Half the picture in China?
03 April 2013Last week's news that Sinoma is considering European acquisitions may seem a little odd considering that Sinoma saw its profit halve in 2012. Yet the Chinese cement equipment builder and cement producer's income (US$3.42bn) puts it level with the likes of European producers, like Italcementi (US$5.75bn) and Buzzi Unicem (US$3.58bn), and the company still made a sizeable profit (US$123m).
Now what really seems odd is the amount by which each of the major Chinese cement producers' profits fell in 2012. Each of the top five producers by capacity, including Sinoma, saw their profits decrease by 40% to 50%. CNBM 'forgot' to report its profit drop but in November 2012 it recorded a 40% fall. Anhui Conch Cement's profit fell by 45.6% to US$1.03bn. Jidong Cement hasn't released any figures but was expecting a 50% drop in late October 2012. China Resources' profit fell by 44.4% to US$300m. Compare that with the diversity of profits reported by the top five European cement producers.
As has been clearly signposted by the Chinese government, the country is overproducing cement. Just how much we can't be sure but the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology declared that 220Mt/yr of 'obsolete' capacity was eliminated in 2012. The country's entire output was placed at 2.18Bt in official figures.
Outmoded capacity is being shut down and industry consolidation encouraged for the main players. Given the state-owned nature of Chinese heavy industry some level of coordination between bad results is to be expected. To give readers an idea of the challenge facing Chinese central planners, Anhui Conch added 28.3Mt/yr of additional cement production capacity in 2012. This is equivalent to the entire capacity of Nigeria or Germany!
Of interest here are China's cement export figures that the government's General Administration of Customs recently released. Exports hit a peak of 33Mt in 2007 and then declined by 68% to 11Mt in 2011. In 2012 they increased slightly to 12Mt. That's 20Mt of cement not leaving the country any more. Plus, the 'Shenzhen sea-sand in concrete scandal' can't be helping the industry's reputation abroad either.
Also of note last week, a Kyrgyzstan minister proposed restricting imports of Chinese cement to his country. Cement produced at Chinese-owned plants will be much harder to block. The next prong of the Chinese plan to tackle its cement industry is direct overseas expansion and this is what we're seeing from the likes of Sinoma and Anhui Conch. Sinoma, as mentioned above, appears to have cash to spend and in 2012 Anhui Conch began its first international project in Indonesia.
China: Shanghai's municipal government has announced that it will stop cement production when air pollution reaches 'heavy' or greater levels. The plan may affect at least three cement plants in the Shanghai area. The move follows a similar plan in Beijing that was introduced in 2012.
According to the plan, emergency measures will be taken when the PM2.5 air quality index rises above 200µg/m3 for 18 hours and looks likely to continue. PM2.5 refers to the measurements of particulate matter smaller than 2.5μm and the World Health Organization considers the safe daily level to be 25µg/m3. The average density of PM2.5 in Shanghai for the first three months of 2013 was 73 µg/m3. China's daily limit is 75µg/m3 and its yearly limit 35µg/m3.
Other emergency measures include alerting the public, restricting production in highly-polluting industries and reducing the number of vehicles on the roads. In addition power plants will be required to use high-quality coal to reduce pollution, vehicles transporting construction materials and waste will be ordered off the roads and any construction work causing dust will be shut down.
Sinoma considering European spending spree
27 March 2013China: China Sinoma International Engineering will increase its capital expenditure by 29% to US$1.81bn some of which may be spent on acquiring European companies.
The Chinese state-owned cement equipment manufacturer and cement producer has set aside US$80.5m to acquire mostly foreign cement equipment companies, said chief financial officer Yu Kaijun as reported by the South China Morning Post. "We are in talks to acquire some European cement equipment companies, including German ones."
In the cement equipment sector, Sinoma International would explore opportunities in Africa, the Middle East and Southeast Asia, said Sinoma chairman Liu Zhijiang. "It will secure its footing in long-term strategic markets, including Russia and South America and enhance its influence in India," he said.
In 2013 Sinoma International aims to secure more than US$4.83bn of orders for cement equipment with about two-thirds of these originating from outside of China. So far Sinoma International has secured US$1.61bn of orders since January 2013, mostly from abroad. Sinoma will also invest US$956m in expanding cement production capacity in China, a decrease from the US$1.13bn it spent in 2012.
Sinoma profit crashes by 51% in 2012
27 March 2013China: China Sinoma International Engineering, one of China's leading providers of cement engineering and integration services, has said that its net profit plunged by 51.3% year-on-year to US$123m in 2012.
In 2012 the company saw its total operating revenue drop by 17.6% year-on-year to US$3.42bn. For its cement engineering and integration services business, the operating revenue fell by 15.5% to US$3.09bn.
The company's revenue from the China market plunged by 23.6% year-on-year to US$1.98bn in 2012. Its overseas market decreased by 8.65% year-on-year to US$1.41bn. As the end of 2012, the Shanghai listed company had US$3.34bn in total assets, up by 8.57% year-on-year.
Anhui Conch Cement profit down by 45.6% in 2012
27 March 2013China: Anhui Conch Cement, the biggest cement producer in Asia by output, has announced that its net profit fell by 45.6% to US$1.03bn in 2012 from US$1.87bn in 2011. The drop was attributed to a decline in the price of cement and a general slowdown in the growth of cement market demand in 2012.
Operating revenue for the company dropped by 6.41% year-on-year to US$7.25bn in 2012 from US$7.83bn in 2011. By market region, Anhui Conch's East China region saw sales fall by 15% in 2012 to US$2.58bn. Its Central China region fell by 19% to US$1.97bn. Its South China region fell by 2% to US$1.39bn, its West China region rose by 59% to US$1.08bn and exports rose by 40% to US$223m.
In 2012 the company sold 187Mt of clinker and cement in 2012, a year-on-year growth of 18.3%. The cement producer added 20.8Mt of clinker production capacity and 28.3Mt of cement production capacity in 2012. At the end of 2012, the group's clinker production capacity and cement production capacity amounted to 184Mt and 209Mt respectively, with a total residual heat electricity generating capacity of 881MW. During 2012 the group also began its first overseas investment project with the start of construction of PT Conch South Kalimantan Cement in Indonesia, with a clinker production line of 3200t/day.
For 2013 Anhui Conch expects 'excessive' production capacity and structural adjustment in the cement industry to continue. However demand will remain stable and government pressure to increase environmental regulations and encourage industry consolidation should benefit the group. The group expects to increase its clinker and cement production capacity by 15.4Mt and 22.5Mt respectively in 2013. For its three major risks for 2013 the group included a volatile construction industry, fuel costs and the risks of further government environmental regulation.
Asia Cement China profits slammed by 71% in 2012
27 March 2013China: Asia Cement Corp, one of Taiwan's leading cement suppliers, said that its subsidiary in China, Asia Cement (China) Holdings Corp, saw its net profit plunge year-on-year by 71% in 2012 to US$63.7m, due to an oversupply in China.
Asia Cement (China) posted a revenue of US$1.08bn in 2012, a year-on-year drop of 18.6%. Asia Cement blamed falling product prices in the Chinese market. Asia Cement (China) had a cement production of 24.9Mt in 2012 and its cement sales were 22.7Mt.
The China-based manufacturer sold 3.8Mt of cement in the Nanchang-Jiujiang district of Jiangxi Province, accounting for 31% of the district's total cement sales in 2012, while the company took a 27% share of the Wuhan market in Hubei Province, selling 5Mt in 2012. It accounted for 21% of the total cement sales in Chengdu, Sichuan Province and accounted for 30% of the cement market in Jiangsu Province's Yangzhou in 2012.
Asia Cement (China) said it aims to boost production capacity in its production line in Jianxi Province in an effort to boost its production to 30Mt/yr. In addition, the company said it will seek targets for acquisitions in a bid to further lift production to 50Mt/yr to rank among the top 10 cement suppliers in China.