
Displaying items by tag: Results
Indonesia's sales grow 18.2% in Q1
18 April 2012Indonesia: Indonesia's domestic cement sales were 12.5Mt in the first quarter of 2012, up 18.2% year-on-year compared to the same period in 2011, according to data from cement firm PT Semen Gresik. March 2012 sales were 4.4Mt, a rise of 16.2% year-on-year, the data showed, with most sales on the islands of Sumatra and Java.
"Indonesia's low cement consumption of around 199kg/capita in 2011 continues to provide ample room for growth," said Teguh Hartanto, analyst at Bahana Securities in Jakarta.
PT Indocement Tunggal Perkasa Tbk, Indonesia's biggest cement firm by market value, has estimated that national demand for cement will grow by 8-10% as infrastructure projects increase after a government law in December 2011 speeds up land acquisition. The country's cement sales fluctuate month to month depending on factors such as holidays and the government's end-of-year project completion deadlines.
Holcim New Zealand makes profit
17 April 2012New Zealand: Holcim New Zealand has reported an after-tax surplus of US$6.77m in 2011 according to its annual report. Total revenue for the year fell by 1.55% to US$214 from US$217m in 2010. Sales of cement fell slightly in 2011 and have been in decline since mid-2008. The national use of cement is a quarter lower than the last peak in 2007.
Notably a proposed new cement plant at Weston, near Oamaru, was on hold because of global economic uncertainty and would not be considered again before late in 2012, the annual report said. However, Holcim's partnerships with large construction companies brought several new projects in 2011, including the Fisher & Paykel Healthcare plant in Auckland and the Auckland District Health Board's six-level car park. Customers south of Christchurch were serviced from Dunedin and bagged cement for Christchurch came from Nelson and Dunedin while bulk cement for Holcim's Sockburn silos was railed from Westport and trucked from Dunedin.
Vietnam reports 9.57Mt sales in Q1
13 April 2012Vietnam: Vietnam's cement sales came to 9.57Mt in the first quarter of 2012, according to the Ministry of Construction. This fulfilled 17.4% of the whole-year plan due to the implementation of several projects in March 2012. Production was 9.98Mt, meeting 18.1% of the full-year target. Production in March 2012 was 4.85Mt, representing nearly half of the quarter's total.
Vietnam spent US$90.5m on imports in the first quarter of 2012, making up 20.7% of the whole-year plan, including US$30.9m in March 2012. The country's exports were US$43.3m, fulfilling 19.2% of the full-year target, including US$10.4m in March 2012.
National consumption is forecast to reach between 55Mt and 56.5Mt in 2012, rising by 11% and 12% from 2011 respectively. Yet the country's cement output is forecast to rise to 73Mt in 2012 due to the additional operation of eight new cement plants with combined production capacity of 6.9Mt. In 2011 Vietnam produced and sold 49.3Mt. The country also imported 1.15Mt and exported 5.5Mt of cement and clinker during the period, the ministry noted.
Saudi firms see strong start to 2012
11 April 2012Saudi Arabia: Yanbu Cement has announced that its first-quarter net profit for 2012 rose by 43% year-on-year to US$38.6m. Earnings per share for the first three months of the year rose to US$0.37 from US$0.26 in the year earlier period. It added that its first-quarter operating profit surged by 44% to US$39.9m.
Meanwhile Yamama Saudi Cement has said that its first quarter profit surged by 54% compared to the first quarter of 2011 to US$74.1m due to higher sales and better operational efficiency. Its first-quarter earnings per share came in at US$0.37 compared to US$0.35 in 2011, according to a statement. Its operating profit for the three-month period rose to US$76.5m, compared to US$49.1m in the same period of 2011, a year-on-year rise of 55%.
Russian production struggling to top 2007-2008 levels
11 April 2012Russia: The Russian cement market remains unable to match its performance in 2007-2008. Although output grew by 15% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2012, Russian companies produced 'just' 9.61Mt of cement. Meanwhile cement prices continue to increase in the country but they are not expected to reach the pre-crisis levels before 2019.
In the first quarter of 2012 production climbed by 15% year-on-year to 9.61Mt according to an estimate made by CMPro Ltd, a Moscow-based company. By comparison in the first quarters of 2007and 2008, production exceeded 11Mt.
According to the President of Lafarge Cement, production in 2012 will rise by 10% against the 2011 level of 56.2Mt, as the market restores due to new construction and infrastructure projects. 2011 was a record year since 2007 as 63.2 million m2 of housing was commissioned. In line with this view Siberian Cement expects cement prices to increase by 12-15% in the summer of 2012 and the CEO of Sukholozhsktsementa Maksim Sotnikov believes that the annual price growth will reach 10%.
Less optimistically, the general director of Basecement Vyacheslav Shmatov said that cement imports are curbing the growth of prices on the domestic market. According to CMPro Ltd, in the first quarter of 2012 imports doubled year-on-year to 340,000t.
Qassim Cement's Q1 profit rises 7.65%
11 April 2012Saudi Arabia: The Qassim Cement Company has reported that its net profit for the first quarter of 2012 grew by 7.65%, from US$39.2m in 2011 to US$42.2m.
The firm added that its consolidated gross profit rose by 4.87% to US$45.5m, up from US$43.4m in 2011. Its consolidated operating profit in the quarter went up by 6.93% to US$43.2m, compared with US$40.44m in 2011. Qassim Cement's first-quarter consolidated net profit increased by 8.45% from US$39m as reported in the fourth quarter of 2011.
Holcim Croatia posts loss in 2011
05 April 2012Croatia: The CEO of Holcim Croatia has said that the company expects flat revenues in 2012 compared to 2011, while it expects to maintain its capacity utilisation rate of 80%. "The last three years were extremely difficult for the construction sector in Croatia," explained Mario Grassl. "Annual cement consumption in Croatia has contracted by 40% compared to 2008. The lack of investment in the construction sector and an unfavourable ratio of fixed costs compared to sales volumes are the main reasons for the loss of around Euro2.5m that Holcim Croatia posted in 2011."
To make matters worse, the overcapacity of local and international producers has depressed sale prices while input costs, mainly those related to fuels, raw materials, energy and distribution, have increased significantly. On top of that, the recent increase in Croatia's VAT rate from 23% to 25% is an additional burden for the end user.
Demand for construction materials in Croatia is still declining. Grassl said that he thinks that a full recovery to pre-crisis levels is still at least three years away. The customer base has been shrinking due to bankruptcy and liquidation procedures and although expectations for improved liquidity in the business sector are high, they will have to be underpinned by stimulus measures at government level. "Based on data from the Croatian Bureau of Statistics, the number of finished residential construction projects in 2011 was around 23% lower than in 2010. Looking ahead, there are no major projects that could be realistically expected to get underway in the next six months. Therefore we expect demand this year to stay at the 2011 level with consumption of cement flat at around 1.8Mt," Grassl said.
Despite the sharp drop in domestic demand over the last few years, Holcim has managed to maintain a share of around 20% of the Croatian market.The company's revenue grew by around 6% in 2011 and Grassl said that he expects a flat performance in that respect in 2012 in a 'best-case' scenario.
In 2011 Holcim Croatia managed to post a growth in exports to Italy and to Bosnia and Herzegovina in the low single digits and expects exports to be similar in 2012. The company exports approximately 20% of its output to Italy which is its largest export market, followed by Slovenia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. "Due to logistic bottlenecks and costs we do not plan to enter new markets," Grassl said.
On all three segments of the building materials market where Holcim Croatia is active, investment activities in 2012 will be mainly related to maintenance and better cost management. "For example, in the first quarter of the year we invested Euro1m at the Koromacno cement plant in the reconstruction of a clinker cooler. This will increase thermal energy efficiency and decrease maintenance costs," said Grassl.
Indocement Q4 net profit rises 20%
28 March 2012Indonesia: PT Indocement, Indonesia's second largest cement producer, has announced that its fourth-quarter 2011 net profit rose 20% as demand for construction jumped in Southeast Asia's biggest economy. The firm's fourth quarter net profit was US$109m in 2011, compared with US$91m in the same period in 2010.
The HeidelbergCement subsidiary reported a full year 2011 net profit of US$392m, up by 12% from US$351m in 2010. Analysts forecast that the full-year 2011 net profit will rise by 11% to US$391m. Indocement's 2010 full-year net revenue rose by 25% to US$1.5bn.
Adana Çimento profit down US$40.8m in 2011
21 March 2012Turkey: Cement producer Adana Çimento has reported that its profit after tax fell by 25% to US$42m in 2011 from US$56m in 2010.
Sales revenue rose by 2% to US$173m in 2011 from US$169m in 2010. Total revenue rose by 6% to US$182 from US$171m. Adana Çimento has recorded profit for the last three years. Notably, the exchange rate between the Turkish Lire and the US Dollar has risen by 22%, to 1.89 per dollar in 2011 from 1.55 in 2010.
France: The board of directors of Ciments Français, part of the Italcementi Group, has examined and approved the audited annual and consolidated accounts as of 31 December 2011, which show a net consolidated profit of Euro274m, a 13.7% drop year-on-year.
Cement sales volumes for the entire year were down by 1.4% at 42.4Mt. Ciments Français Cement sales improved in France, North America, Morocco and India but decreased in Egypt due to the political crisis there. An overall fall in demand, strong inflation on fuel prices and negative translation effects resulted in deterioration in the company's operating results. These impacts were only partly mitigated by efficiency measures implemented throughout the year.
As of 31 December 2011, Group consolidated revenues were Euro3.89bn, down by 3.8% year-on-year. Its recurring earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) amounted to Euro702m, down by over 20% year-on-year. Earnings before interest and tax dropped by 38% to Euro309m following recognition of Euro359m in depreciations and Euro53.4m in impairment losses, mainly in crisis-hit Spain and Greece.
Group investments in industrial and intangible assets amounted to Euro301m as of 31 December 2011, down by 25.6% compared to 31 December 2010. They mainly related to the strengthening of production in France, Belgium and Egypt and an increase of production capacity in India and Morocco.
A tight management of cash flows, the disposal of assets in Turkey and the sale of subsidiary Axim contributed to strengthen Ciments Français' net financial position. At the end of December 2011, its net financial debt was reduced by Euro390m to Euro1.02bn compared to Euro1.41bn as of 31 December 2010.
Regarding 2012 Ciments Français reported that the markets in which it operates should be more stable. Sales volumes are expected to stabilise at a level similar to that of 2011, increasing in North America and Morocco while declining in southern Europe. Egypt remains a source of uncertainty. Prices are likely to trend more positively and partially offset the rise in energy costs and the impact of inflation on fixed costs. Additionally, the efficiency programs launched in 2011 should increase operating results in 2012.
The group will initiate a new cycle of investments in 2012 related to its industrial facilities, mainly in Gulbarga, India and Bulgaria. In Morocco, the group expects a new expansion phase after the commissioning of the Ait Baha plant.