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China Resources profit falls by 76% to US$130m in 2015 14 March 2016
China: China Resources’ profit has fallen by 76% year-on-year to US$130m in 2015 from US$542m in 2014. Its revenue fell by 18% to US$3.45bn from US$4.21bn. It blamed the drop in revenue on falling demand for cement and a general economic slowdown in China.
Despite the fall in demand, sales volumes of cement rose by 7% to 77Mt in 2015 from 72Mt in 2014. The group reported that it maintained its cement production utilisation rate at a surprising 99.5% and its clinker production utilisation rate at 113.3% in 2015. It completed the construction of one 1Mt/yr cement grinding line at Lianjiang City, Guangdong and a fifth 1.6Mt/yr clinker production line at Fengkai County, Guangdong.
China Resources expects its cement and clinker production capacities to continue rising to 2018 to 87.3Mt/yr and 64.3Mt/yr respectively. It added that new infrastructure projects, the gradual recovery of real estate market and long-term national policies of the ‘One Belt and One Road’ initiative and the thirteenth five-year plan will help to stabilise cement demand in the medium and long term.
US lifts sanctions on Atbara Cement 11 March 2016
Sudan/US: The US Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has removed Atbara Cement from a blacklist of Sudanese firms and individuals subjected to economic sanctions. OFAC posted a notice to its website on 9 March 2016 deleting the cement producer from its Sudan Designation Nationals list.
Atbara Cement was added to OFAC's Sudan list in 1999 when it was owned by the Sudanese government. In late 2002 the factory was privatized and sold to the African Development and Investment company based in Dubai and owned by three Arab businessmen: Sheikh Suleiman Bin Abdul Aziz Al-Rajhi, Sheikh Saleh Kamel and Sheikh Ibrahim Mandarin. In 2003 Al-Rajhi become the sole owner of the company, according to the Sudan Tribune.
Court annuls information request by European Commission into cement company competition probe 11 March 2016
Europe: The European Court of Justice has annulled a request for information by the European Commission into several cement producers in a cartel probe. The judgement could restrict the competition watchdog's investigative powers, according to reporting by the Wall Street Journal.
The commission opened an antitrust investigation in late 2010 looking at the activities of Cemex, Holcim, Lafarge, HeidelbergCement and others. Originally the cement companies were suspected by the commission of colluding with rivals to fix prices and share markets in Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Spain and the UK. However, the investigation was closed in mid-2015 due to insufficient evidence. Since then the cement producers have challenged the commission’s right to ask for the level of detail they requested. The ruling overturns a 2014 decision by the EU's General Court, which said the commission questionnaires were justified.
Magnesita revenue rises by 18% to US$937m in 2015 11 March 2016
Brazil: Magnesita’s revenue has risen by 18% year-on-year to US$937m in 2015 from US$796m in 2014. Its net loss decreased to US$294m in 2015 from US$27m in 2014. The company described 2015 as a year ‘marked by a challenging economic environment globally.’ It noted a drop in steel production in the US due to high imports, currency effects and the poor economy in Brazil.
The manufacturer’s production volumes of refractories fell by 6.9% to 958,000t in 2015 from 1.03Mt in 2014. However, its sales revenue from its refractories business rose by 15.6% to US$816m from US$706m. Although the majority of Magnesita’s refractory sales were to the steel industry, its sales volumes to other industries, including cement, fell faster in 2015 by 11.7% to 133,000t. This decrease was mainly attributed to the decline of the Brazilian cement industry and by lower demand for cement in Venezuela. Despite this, sales volume growth of 15% was reported in Middle East and Africa led by Saudi Arabia and Egypt.
Titan sales rise by 20.7% to Euro1.4bn in 2015 11 March 2016
Greece: Titan’s turnover grew by 20.7% year-on-year to Euro1.14bn in 2015 from Euro1.16bn in 2014. Its net profit rose by 9.1% to Euro33.8m from Euro30.9m. The cement producer attributed the result to growth in the US market.
Despite rising turnover in the fourth quarter of 2015 the group reported a net loss of Euro2.4m down from a net profit of Euro0.4m in the fourth quarter of 2014. This was due to its subsidiary Titan America suspending construction of a cement plant in Castle Hayne, North Carolina, resulting in a Euro12.4 impairment charge due to the suspended investment.
By region the group reported that its total turnover for Greece and Western Europe in 2015 fell by 5.6% to Euro269m, mainly due to the continued depression in the construction market in Greece. Turnover in the US grew by 45% to Euro680m, supported by a growing residential housing market particularly in the south east of the country. In Southeastern Europe turnover remained static at Euro209m. In Egypt cement demand grew by 5% but low prices in the second half of the year reduced profits. Turnover increased by 22.3% to Euro241m in this territory.
Group net debt rose by Euro81m in 2015 to Euro621m, due to high capital expenditure in 2015, the acquisition of a minority stake in Antea in Albania and the strengthening US Dollar.