Displaying items by tag: Results
Oman: Oman Cement’s profit has risen by 39% year-on-year to US$26m for the first nine months of 2016 from US$18.1m in the same period of 2015. Its revenue grew by 12.45% to US$114m from US$101m.
Cash crunch hinders Lafarge Zimbabwe
05 October 2016Zimbabwe: Lafarge Zimbabwe has blamed cash shortages for mounting losses. The company reported that it made a loss of US$2.2m in the first six months of 2016, up from a loss of US$1.3m in the same period of 2015. Its sales revenue grew slightly to US$26.5m from US$25.4, according to the New Zimbabwe newspaper. The cement producer has blamed the loss on cash shortages in the country and competition from imports.
“The volumes of cement sales remained subdued due to increased competitive activity in the total market following the influx of cement imports into the country as well as the entry of a major competitor into the Harare market,” said chairman Kumbirayi Katsande. He added that import restrictions would be helpful but that they would not solve major structural problems with the local economy.
Cash shortages are causing delays in paying foreign creditors said Katsanda. The country is preparing to introduce bond notes, a new local currency, to ease the problem, in November 2016.
West China Cement reports loss for first half of 2016
03 October 2016China: West China Cement Limited has reported that its made a loss of US$17m in the first half of 2016 down from a profit of US$0.36m in the same period in 2015. Its revenue fell by 4% to US$244m from US$253m. Its gross profit fell by 29% to US$22.9m from US$32.3m.
Steppe Cement reduces loss in first half of 2016
14 September 2016Kazakhstan: Steppe Cement has reduced its consolidated loss after tax to US$1.5m in the first half of 2016 from US$2.2m in the same period in 2015. Its turnover fell by 47% year-on-year to US$23.7m from US$44.7m due to a devaluation of the Kazakh Tenge. Despite this, it increased its sales of cement by 6% to 0.76Mt from 0.72Mt.
The cement producer reported that the Kazakh cement market decreased by 10% during the first half of 2016. It expects a market of about 9Mt in 2016, down from 9.6Mt in 2015. Steppe Cement has increased its market share to 18% year-on-year in the reporting period from 16% and it expects to reach a share of 19% for the full year. Imports of cement into Kazakhstan have decreased by 63% in 2016 as the Russian Rouble exchange rate has returned to its historical level against the KZT. Imports represent 5% of the market down from 12% in 2015.
Nigeria: Alhaji Abdulsamad Rabiu, the chairman of the Cement Company of Northern Nigeria (CCNN), has warned that the price of cement may rise if the Naira continues to devalue. He made the comments at the company’s Annual General Meeting according to the Nation newspaper. Imported inputs such as fuel, machinery, spare parts and gypsum would all be affected by local currency depreciation. The cement producer was forced to shut down its Sokoto cement plant for intermittent periods in late 2015 due to poor supplies of low pour fuel oil (LFPO) from the Kaduna refinery.
The subsidiary of BUA Group reported that its turnover fell by 14% year-on-year to US$41.4m in 2015 from US$48m in 2014. Its profit after tax fell by 37% to US$3.81m from US$6.09m.
Africa/South Africa: Despite a decline in the construction sector, cement giant Pretoria Portland Cement (PPC) continues to defy the odds as it posted a 9% uptick in quarterly sales revenue. The cement producer said sales revenue in South Africa has seen an upswing of 2% with volumes increasing by at least 9%, although earnings per share disappointed as it fell by 55% for the period. However, revenue from outside of South Africa rose by 19% on the back of significant volume growth and newly commissioned plants in Rwanda as well as gains from the currency translations in Zimbabwe and Botswana. "The group's revenue has improved by 6% supported by strong cement sales volume growth in South Africa and Rwanda. Cement sales volumes grew in excess of 30% in the Coastal regions in South Africa," CEO Daryll Castle said.
"However, good cost control has led to further impressive declines in group overheads while variable delivered cost of sales per tonne in the South African cement business were well below inflation," Castle said. In addition, the cement maker said its cost of sales was also on the rise, increasing by 14% to R1.8bn (US$99m), largely on the back of higher volumes in the South African cement industry as well as more expensive logistics which rose by 3% during the period. "On consolidation of foreign currency denominated subsidiaries, the weakness of the rand contributed to rising cost of sales. Gross profit decreased by 11%, from R709m (US$50m) for the quarter ended June 2015 to R630m (US$44.4m) for the current quarter. "This decrease was mainly ascribed to the impact of selling prices pressures felt in our key cement operating markets together with the lower sales volumes in Zimbabwe and Botswana," the company said. But, the company said the R135m (US$9.5m)acquisition of 3Q Mahuma Concrete, one of the largest independently owned ready-mix concrete supplier in South Africa, will improve PPC's ready-mix footprint.
Adelaide Brighton warns of lower profit in 2016
31 August 2016Australia: Adelaide Brighton has said its annual net profit is likely to fall in 2016 compared to 2015, mainly on the back of lower income from property deals. However, its management has offered an otherwise bullish outlook, with price rises looming for several key products.
Adelaide Brighton said it expects net profit for 2016 to be US$143-150m. The top end of the range would represent a 3.8% decline year-on-year. It reported that annual sales volumes of cement and clinker were likely to be below 2015 levels, but volumes of premixed concrete, aggregates and concrete products would be significantly higher than a year earlier.
For the first half of 2016, Adelaide Brighton reported a net profit of US$57.8m, a 6.7% decrease compared to the same period of 2015. After stripping out the impact of property transactions, the company's earnings were 7.8% higher year-on-year.
Cementarnica Usje profit up 11%
31 August 2016Macedonia: Cementarnica Usje, Titan Cement’s Macedonian subsidiary, has announced that its first-half consolidated net profit increased by 11% year-on-year to Euro9.3m, mainly due to higher operating revenue and lower financial expenses.
The company's consolidated operating revenue rose by 9% year-on-year to Euro33.1m in the first half of 2016, while operating expenses grew by 10% to Euro23.6m. Operating profit rose by 7% year-on-year to Euro10.2m.
Fall in Sinoma's sales revenue lead by engineering division
30 August 2016China: China National Materials Company's (Sinoma) sales revenue has fallen by 5.8% year-on-year to US$3.26bn in the first half of 2016 from US$3.46bn in the same period of 2015. All three of its business divisions reported falling revenue in the period, led by its cement equipment and engineering services business, which recorded the greatest decline at 8.51% to US$1.42bn from US$1.55bn. Sinoma blamed this on a fall in orders. Its cement business reported a 4.22% fall in sales revenue to US$1.2bn from US$1.25bn. This was attributed to 'intense' market competition and low cement prices. Cement sales volumes rose by 7.61% to 33.5Mt. The company's overall net profit rose by 2% to US$64m from US$62.8m. However, its net profit attributable to shareholders fell by 30.9% to US$46m from US$66.6m.
China: Huaxin Cement’s sales revenue has fallen by 11% year-on-year to US$860m in the first half of 2016 from US$968m in the same period of 2015. Its net profit fell by 91% to US$1.21m from US$13.3m. The cement producer reported falling sales in most regions, with the exception of Tibet and Henan. Notable decreases in sales revenue occurred in Jiangsu, Jiangxi and Guangxi. The company blamed the result on falling prices caused by production overcapacity and ‘vicious’ market competition.
Outside of China the company has started operation at its 300t/day Gayur plant and it is building a 0.5Mt/yr grinding plant at Dangara in Tajikistan. Planning work has also been conducted at a 2800t/day cement plant at Narayani in Nepal and a 2500t/day cement plant at Aktobe in Kazakhstan.