
Displaying items by tag: Mexico
Mexico: A second industrial byproducts processing line has been inaugurated at the Cemento Cruz Azul plant in Tepezalá, Aguascalientes. The new facility, which cost US$8.5m, will create 100 jobs and convert over 66,000t/yr of post-consumer materials into energy for the cement plant's processes.
Víctor Manuel Velázquez Rangel, president of the board of directors of Cooperativa Cruz Azul, said "This is the result of joint work, teamwork and a shared vision with the State Government, which has always been concerned about the carbon footprint, sustainability and the environment. With this project we leave testimony of our great commitment and demonstrate that innovation and technology can go hand in hand with the preservation of the environment."
Cemex sells in the Dominican Republic
07 August 2024Cemex announced this week that it is preparing to divest its operations in the Dominican Republic for US$950m. At first this seems a little close to home for the Mexico-based company but it felt similar at the start of 2022 when it sold its businesses in Costa Rica and El Salvador to the same company, Cementos Progreso. Readers may also recall that the business press reported, correctly we now know, in mid-2023 that Cemex was seriously considering its options in the Dominican Republic.
The current agreement will see Cemex sell one cement plant in the Dominican Republic along with related cement, concrete, aggregates and marine terminal assets for US$950m. The deal is expected to close towards the end of 2024. Cemex says that it is making the transaction to reduce its exposure to emerging markets and refocus its capital upon priority markets, such as the US. This reasoning is very much in line with its international peers in the building materials sector, which have been doing likewise.
This is the potential biggest divestment Cemex will have made since 2009. It is bigger than the agreement to sell the share of its business in the Philippines, revealed earlier in 2024, for an enterprise value of US$660m. Back in 2000, Cemex sold its Australia-based subsidiary to Holcim for US$1.7bn. Holcim still operates in Australia today via Cement Australia, a joint-venture with Heidelberg Materials. Plus, CRH, one of Cemex’s competitors that has also shown a keen interest in the US market previously, concluded a deal to buy a stake in AdBri in July 2024. Infamously, Cemex took over building products company Rinker in 2007 just as the 2007 - 2008 financial crisis burst. It then spent the next decade-and-a-half reducing its debt levels. In April 2024 it was pleased to announce that it had been awarded full investment grade status by rating agency Fitch Ratings.
Selling up in the Dominican Republic seems curious at first but, as mentioned at the start, we’ve been here before with Cemex’s subsidiaries in Central America and the Caribbean, plus the company has been working on it for at least a year. It is worth noting though that Cemex reopened a second production line at its San Pedro de Macorís site in 2022 giving the plant a cement production capacity of 2.4Mt/yr. That gives the current deal a value of US$380/t based on capacity. Local competitor Domicem also started up a second line at its Sabana Grande de Palenque cement plant in late 2023, demonstrating that other cement companies have also been investing in the market. Cemex’s sales from its business in the country were reasonable in 2023 but its operating earnings were the fourth biggest in the group after Mexico, the US and the UK. In its results for the first half of 2024 the group noted that tourism projects were driving demand in the country.
Graph 1: Mix of sales by region for Cemex, 2019 - 2023. Source: Company reports.
Graph 1 above presents the general way Cemex has been directing its business internationally over the last five years. Sales were roughly half-and-half between Mexico & the US and the rest of the world in 2019. In 2023 the ratio was more like 60:40. Operating earnings have tracked the same way with an even greater emphasis on Mexico and the US. It should be noted though that despite sales revenue being higher in the US, operating earnings remain higher in Mexico.
Pretty much every western international cement company is watching the US market intently right now. So, Cemex’s decision to sell a profitable business in the Dominican Republic to fund further investment in the US makes sense. Although what it might actually want to buy at US prices right now might be a tough call. CRH, for example, paid US$2.1bn in late 2023 to buy the 2.1Mt/yr Hunter cement plant, a network of cement terminals and 20 ready-mix concrete batching plants in South Texas. This was arguably quite a high price. One last point to consider is that the financial press was reporting falls in the global stock markets this week amid fears over the outlook of the US economy. Whatever happens next, at least Cemex is selling rather than buying this time round.
Cooperativa Cruz Azul to build new cement plant in Campeche
02 August 2024Mexico: Cooperativa Cruz Azul has announced the upcoming construction of a new cement plant in Seybaplaya, Campeche, with an investment exceeding US$300m. The plant will occupy a site previously used for lime and cement production in order to minimise environmental impact. Construction started on 1 August 2024, with completion of the first production line anticipated by the end of 2026, Noticias Financieras News has reported. The plant will produce 3000t/day of cement. The project is expected to create 2000 temporary construction jobs and 350 permanent positions.
Mexico: Cemex has reported its first-half results for 2024. Net income fell by 15% to US$230m, although earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) increased by 2% to US$965m. Sales remained flat at US$4.5bn. They rose in Mexico by 13%, to US$2.7bn, and in Central and South America and the Caribbean by 3%, to US$879m. However, they fell in the US by 2%, to US$2.6bn, and in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Asia by 8%, to US$2.24bn.
Fernando Gonzalez, CEO of Cemex, said "These results demonstrate the effectiveness of our commercial management and growth strategy. The price contribution of our products continues to outpace our input cost inflation."
Colombia: Cemex Colombia has appointed Juana María Serna as Commercial Vice President. She previously worked as the Vice President for Strategic Planning for Cemex Colombia & Peru and the VP for Builders and Urbanization Solutions for Cemex Colombia from late 2020. Earlier in her career she worked for Cemex Group in Mexico, becoming Global Customer Experience Director in 2018. She started working for Cemex in Colombia in 2007. Serna holds an undergraduate degree in Architecture and a Master of Business Administration from the Universidad de Los Andes in Bogotá.
Mexico: Regenera, a subsidiary of Cemex, has launched a pilot project at its Broquers Ambiental plant in Querétaro to transform the city’s organic waste into alternative fuel using a drying process known as ‘biosecado’. This initiative makes Querétaro the first zero waste municipality in Mexico, according to the company. The plant now processes almost 90% of the municipality’s waste, transforming over 8000t monthly into biomass to reduce the amount of material sent to landfill.
Vice president of urban solutions at Cemex Mexico, Antonio Balmori, said "This project that we started today at our Broquers Ambiental plant excites me very much because it will take the city of Querétaro to the next level in waste management, where we will seek to take advantage of 100% of the urban solid waste generated in the municipality."
Cementos Moctezuma reports revenue increase
11 July 2024Mexico: Cementos Moctezuma recorded a 20.8% increase in revenues to US$1.1bn in 2023, according to its 2023 Integrated Annual Report. During the same period, the company invested more than US$37.2m in active projects, producing more than 7Mt of cement. The company also reported an earnings before interest, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) of US$500m.
CEO José María Barroso said "2023 represented the opportunity to achieve continuous improvement in administrative, technical and commercial aspects, as well as through strategic alliances; all focused on cost reduction and sustainable efficiency."
Mexico: The National Cement Chamber (CANACEM) has appointed Julio Cedeño as its General Director. He previously worked as the Director of Institutional Relations for the Camara Nacional de la Industria del Hierro y del Acero (CANCERO), an organisation representing the steel sector in Mexico. Cedeño is a graduate of the Universidad Iberoamericana in Political Science and Public Administration.
CANACEM represents the six cement companies in Mexico: Cementos Moctezuma, Cemento Cruz Azul, Cemex México, Grupo Cementos de Chihuahua, Holcim México and Cementos Fortaleza. 35 cement plants operate in the country producing nearly 47Mt/yr of cement and employing over 26,500 people. The organisation was originally founded in 1948.
Mexico advances tyre recycling for cement production
05 July 2024Mexico: The Secretariat of the Environment (Sedema) has reported that over 5600 tyres collected from illegal dumps in the districts of Xochimilco and Gustavo Madero have been transported to a treatment plant to be used as an alternative fuel for cement production. This initiative is part of a strategy to manage tyre waste, supported by a collaboration with Geocycle Mexico. The effort aims to address public environmental issues caused by tyre disposal in public spaces and environmentally sensitive areas, potentially leading to wildfires. Sedema also plans to expand tyre collection through the Reciclatrón Program to promote comprehensive waste management and reduce the reliance on fossil fuels and mineral extraction.
Mexico: Cementos Moctezuma has appointed Fortino Delgado Carrillo as its Director of Legal Affairs. He succeeds Belen Molins Benavent in the post.
Delgado has worked as Senior Legal Manager Litigation for Cementos Moctezuma since early 2021. Before this he held a variety of corporate legal roles for companies, including Monere Business, Inter-Con Security Systems and MultiPack. He also worked as the Director General for the National Human Rights Commission Mexico. Delgado holds law qualifications from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and the Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha.