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Stronger 3Q helps Cemex offset weaker 1H

  • Spanish Market: Cement, Petroleum coke
  • 28/10/25

Cemex's cement sales volumes were mostly steady on the year in January-September, as a 5pc increase in the third quarter offset declines in the first half.

Cemex said in July that it anticipated total cement sales volume to be flat to the prior year in full-year 2025, after sales fell by 4pc across all regions in the second quarter.

Although volumes were still down on the year in Mexico and the US in the first nine months, a 7pc increase in the Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) region and a 3pc increase in South and Central America and the Caribbean (SCAC) allowed overall cement sales to pick up by 1pc on the year. These cement volumes include domestic and export volumes of gray cement, white cement, special cement, mortar and clinker.

Revenue was down by 3pc year on year in the first nine months, falling to $11.95bn, while profit fell by 6pc to $3.95bn. The largest drop in profit was from Mexico, which fell by 17pc to $1.59bn.

But total revenue was up by 5pc in the third quarter and profit rose by 7pc.

Cement prices were up by 2pc year over year across all Cemex's regions in the third quarter, with a 6pc increase in Mexico and 4pc and 3pc rises in EMEA and SCAC offsetting 3pc declines in the US and Europe.

Cemex divested its Panama operations to Grupo Estrella and used part of the proceeds to acquire a majority stake in US-based Couch Aggregates. The company expects the investment in aggregates to increase production capacity by about 10pc in 2026.

Cemex is optimistic about the outlook for US cement demand because of the infrastructure and industrial sectors. Infrastructure related to the 2026 World Cup should also boost demand in Mexico, the company said.

"Definitely we see a better outlook for Mexico for next year," chief executive Jaime Muguiro said, with Cemex having an "extensive a number of projects in the pipeline".

And in Europe, the tightening of free allowances in the EU Emissions Trading System and the upcoming carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) that is planned to start on 1 January 2026 should support cement pricing. The CBAM policy's increase in costs for imported cement and clinker could allow European producers to add €5-10/t to their cement pricing, Muguiro said. Cement companies in Turkey and Algeria that have previously exported to Europe have a much higher CO2 footprint than what Cemex expects the European benchmark to be, which could be as low as 650kg of CO2/t of clinker.

"We do have an advantage because in Europe, we have much lower CO2 footprint," he said.

For the full year, the company maintained its guidance for a low-single-digit decline in cement volumes for its overall operations and its US operations, with a high-single-digit decline in Mexico. In EMEA and SCAC, it expects a mid- and low-single-digit increase, respectively.

Lower petroleum coke prices also contributed to the stronger third quarter. In Mexico, its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation margin expanded by 5 percentage points in the third quarter, with a 18pc decrease in unitary fuel cost contributing about 1.1 percentage points of that, Muguiro said.

The company expects a high-single-digit percentage decrease in its energy costs per tonne of cement produced for full-year 2025.


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