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Cemex expects coke prices to continue to fall

  • : Petroleum coke
  • 24/10/28

Mexico-based multinational cement maker Cemex expects its energy costs, including for fuel like petroleum coke, will continue to decrease in the fourth quarter, in line with a trend of decreasing prices since the third quarter of 2023.

The cement maker's fuel costs declined by 23pc during the January-September period compared to the same period last year on a per tonne of cement basis, the company said today. Less volatile and relatively low prices for coke compared with recent years were a major underlying factor, with Argus' 6.5pc sulphur fob US Gulf coast coke assessment averaging $63.72/t during the January-September period, down by 37pc from the same nine months in 2023. The company also attributed the decline in fuel costs to "the increased use of lower cost and lower carbon fuels" and a "continued reduction in clinker factor."

"We have seen this cost trending down since the third quarter of 2023 and expect this to continue through year-end," Cemex chief financial officer Maher Al-Haffar said.

Cemex maintained its full-year 2024 guidance for a high single-digit percentage decrease in the energy cost per tonne of cement produced compared with 2023.

But the cement maker adjusted its guidance for full-year cement sales volumes downward from its second quarter projections. Cemex now anticipates a low single-digit percentage decrease on the year in full-year 2024 cement volumes instead of the flat to low single-digit increase it guided for in the second quarter.

Cemex's cement sales volumes decreased by 4pc to 11.25mn t in the third quarter compared with the same period last year. Inclement weather in the US and in Mexico disrupted the cement maker's sales volumes, with precipitation totals in parts of both markets rising by more than half from the third quarter of 2023. Cemex estimates that 50pc of the third-quarter decrease in cement volumes in the US and 40pc of the drop in cement volumes in Mexico was related to poor weather.

In Europe, third-quarter cement sales volumes increased by 2pc on the year after nine quarters of consecutive decline, as lower interest rates and improved economic activity drove more demand for construction.

The company's revenue totaled $4.09bn in the third quarter, down by 6pc from the same quarter in 2023.

Investment in growth focused on US

Cemex is increasing its investments in developed markets, particularly in the US and in Mexico, with plans to make bolt-on and margin enhancement investments in addition to small and mid-sized mergers and acquisitions.

Part of the funding for the investments comes from the company's plans to sell some plants, with $2.2bn worth of divestments expected to close before the end of the year.

Cemex completed the sale of its Guatemala plant in September, boosting the company's earnings in the third quarter.

Even so, the cement maker's profit totaled $1.34bn in the third quarter, down by 10pc from the same period last year.

The company's narrower focus on the US comes as multinational cement maker Holcim is preparing to spin off and list its North American business in the US in 2025. But when asked about the possibility of listing its North American business in the US, Cemex said it "would prefer not to speculate on whether we're looking at a particular strategy versus another at this point in time."


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25/05/08

US producer Core raises coal sales volume outlook

US producer Core raises coal sales volume outlook

Houston, 8 May (Argus) — US coal producer Core Natural Resources plans to sell more coal in 2025 than previously anticipated, with stronger domestic utility demand expected to offset challenging seaborne market conditions and some production setbacks. Core projected on Thursday that it will ship around 75.5mn-81mn st (68.5mn-73.5mn metric tonnes) of thermal and metallurgical coal this year, up from its February forecast of 72.5mn-79mn st. The new expectations for this year still are lower than the combined 85mn st sold in 2024 by Arch Resources and Consol Energy before the two companies merged in January to form Core. On the thermal side, Core has 75.6mn st of coal under contract to ship this year, including 26.5mn st of high calorific-value (CV) thermal coal, 41.9mn st of Powder River basin (PRB) coal and 7.2mn st of metallurgical coal. While the global trade environment is "uncertain", there are domestic opportunities because of continued US electricity load growth, chief executive Paul Lang said on Core's first-quarter earnings call. Overall US electricity generation was 3pc higher in 2024 than in 2023. And in the first four months of this year, generation was 3.9pc higher than in January-April 2024 as coal-fired generation climbed by around 20pc, more than offsetting a "small" decline in natural gas power, Lang said. Colder-than-normal weather during the first quarter resulted in surging natural gas prices and higher power prices in the PJM Interconnection, causing generators to dispatch more coal power than expected and trimming inventories. Utilities are in the market earlier this year than they had been recently, seeking both spot and term coal volumes, Core senior vice president Robert Braithwaite said. "We actually have a couple [requests for proposals] out today," Braithwaite said. One solicitation is for deliveries through 2030 and one is for deliveries through 2028, he said, without naming the prospective buyers. Core also expects a number of international headwinds to be short-lived. While there has been "a bit of a price wall" for potential high-sulfur thermal coal business to India because of recent drops in petroleum coke prices, "we would expect that to pick back up in the coming months", Braithwaite said. In addition, if there is a trade deal between China and the US, China may resume buying US thermal coal and petroleum coke, he said. This would tighten the supply of coal and petroleum coke going into the Indian market and support higher fuel prices, according to Braithwaite. And although seaborne metallurgical coal markets remained muted during the first quarter, growing blast furnace capacity in southeast Asia is anticipated to strengthen export demand for US coking coal, Lang said. Last quarter, the company sold 2.31mn st of metallurgical coal. Record quarterly production at Core's metallurgical coal-producing Leer mine in West Virginia limited the impact of a longwall outage at Leer South, which was sealed in January to extinguish a fire. Core said it resumed continuous miner operations at Leer South in February and expects to restart longwall production by the middle of this year. In addition, there were three longwall moves at the producer's Pennsylvania mining complex during the quarter. Lang noted that there is a fourth longwall move currently in progress at the complex, and the fifth and final planned move for 2025 will occur in the back half of the year. Core's total coal sales during the first quarter fell to 20.1mn st of thermal and metallurgical, down from 21.3mn shipped by Consol and Arch combined a year earlier. Core sold 7.1mn st of high CV thermal coal at an average price of $63.18/st last quarter, and 10.7mn st of PRB coal priced at an average of $14.93/st. In the first quarter of 2024, Consol's Pennsylvania mining complex sold 6.1mn st of high CV coal and Arch shipped 12.8mn st out of the PRB and from its high-CV West Elk mine in Colorado. By Anna Harmon Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Unimetal acquires Germany’s CS Additive


25/05/06
25/05/06

Unimetal acquires Germany’s CS Additive

Houston, 6 May (Argus) — Sao Paulo-based coke marketer and calciner Unimetal purchased German carbon products producer CS Additive at the end of April, a company that uses petroleum coke as a raw material for its product called Carbolux. CS Additive produces carburizing products for the iron and steel industries. Its Carbolux products are used for steel and casting production, brake linings and other specialty carbon products such as graphite lubricant. The company said it uses graphitized and calcined petroleum coke from European, South American and Chinese sources to produce these products. The acquisition will help to increase its market coverage in Europe, Turkey, the Middle East and India, Unimetal said, as well as "strengthen its commitment to environmentally friendly, energy-efficient processes and state-of-the-art thermal cleaning technology." "CS Additive's location in the industrial heart of Germany will play an important role to process and distribute our entire product portfolio," Unimetal chief executive Alan Yung said. By Hadley Medlock Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cemex may increase cement prices on tariffs


25/04/28
25/04/28

Cemex may increase cement prices on tariffs

Houston, 28 April (Argus) — Mexico-based multinational cement maker Cemex says it is in a "good position" to avoid any potential negative effects from US import tariffs, as the company plans to increase product prices should Washington escalate its global trade war. Cemex's cement imports from countries such as Vietnam, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Greece could be hit with high tariffs in July if US president Donald Trump decides to follow through on a plan he announced early this month, but quickly put on a 90-day pause after financial markets roiled. Cemex is prepared to increase prices on cement products to help offset additional costs brought on by these tariffs, the company said today. "We have already communicated to our customers that, should those tariffs be implemented, we would be introducing a surcharge immediately to pass along to consumers that cost increase," said chief executive Jaime Muguiro. The company did not detail how much these price increases would be. Cemex noted that the company imposed similar measures in 2022 to account for high energy price inflation, when its incremental costs suddenly increased by $60/t. "We were able to increase prices to more than offset that cost, preserving margins," Muguiro said. But the company also plans to increase domestic production in the US to reduce its need for seaborne imports. "We're producing more cement locally, and we do plan to replace imports," Muguiro said. "I think that we are in a good position to navigate current uncertainty on tariffs," he continued. Part of the company's plan to deal with potential high tariffs on suppliers like Vietnam is to supply more from its Mexican plants, shipping by rail from a plant in Torreon in central Mexico and by sea from east Mexican plants. Mexican imports are currently exempt from tariffs under the US-Mexico-Canada (USMCA) free trade agreement. But the administration had previously sought to hit Mexico with a 25pc tariff, which US cement makers said "could adversely affect energy and national security". Cemex's consolidated domestic grey cement sales volume totalled 10.2mn t in the first quarter, down by 2pc on the year. In the US, domestic grey cement sales volumes were down by 3pc on the year, while prices fell by 1pc. Cemex attributed this decline to unusually cold winter weather in key markets during the quarter that hindered construction activity. But lower demand allowed the company to complete half of its scheduled annual maintenance, and Cemex expects sales volumes to be supported by higher infrastructure spending in the near future. Sales volumes in Mexico fell by 9pc, while prices fell by 14pc on a US dollar basis, as a new administration in the country contributed to an expected slowdown in construction activity during the quarter. Cemex expects a pickup in sales volumes in the second half of the year, when the new government executes its budget for rural roads and social housing. Declines in these regions offset gains in cement sales volumes and pricing in Europe, the Middle East and Africa and South, Central America and the Caribbean during the quarter. Cemex also said that its energy cost per tonne of cement produced in the first quarter fell by 17pc on the year. This was because of lower power and fuel prices, as well as improvement in clinker factor and thermal efficiency, the company said. Cemex posted $3.6bn in revenue in the first quarter, down by 1pc from the same quarter the prior year. The company also reported a record profit of $734mn during the quarter, driven primarily by the sale of its operations in the Dominican Republic. By Hadley Medlock Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cement sales at India’s Dalmia fall on year in Jan-Mar


25/04/28
25/04/28

Cement sales at India’s Dalmia fall on year in Jan-Mar

Singapore, 28 April (Argus) — Indian cement maker Dalmia Bharat reported a 2.8pc decline on the year in January-March sales, although sales increased by a sharp 28pc on the quarter because of an uptick in demand. Bombay Stock Exchange-listed Dalmia sold 8.6mn t of cement over January-March, down from 8.8mn t a year earlier but well above the 6.7mn t sold in October-December 2024. Sales rose by 2pc to 29.4mn t in the 2024-25 fiscal year ending 31 March. Cement demand was "relatively slow" in the first three quarters of the last fiscal year at 3-3.5pc growth, while the industry's full-year growth is estimated at 4-5pc, the company said. It expects cement demand to grow by 7-8pc in the current year. The year-on-year decline in sales in January-March was because of a higher base in the year-earlier period, when the company sold 0.6mn tthrough a tolling arrangement in January-March 2024, Dalmia told investors on 24 April. This arrangement was discontinued in July 2024. Power and fuel costs fell by 7.2pc from a year earlier to 945 rupees/t ($11.10/t) of cement in January-March. This was primarily because average fuel consumption costs fell by $19/t on the year to $95/t in the latest quarter. Cement plants use petroleum coke and thermal coal as fuel in cement kilns. The Argus -assessed delivered India price of 6.5pc coke averaged $98.38/t for October-December, down by almost 25pc from the average of $131.04/t a year earlier. Most of the US high-sulphur coke that Indian cement makers consumed in January-March would typically have been booked in the previous quarter, considering a voyage time of approximately six weeks. Revenue from sales fell by 5pc on the year to Rs40.91bn in January-March, a sharper decline compared with the 2.8pc drop in sales volume because of lower cement prices. The fiscal year's revenue also slipped by almost 5pc to Rs139.8bn. The company reported higher cement prices this quarter, and it is reasonably optimistic about the sustainability of recent hikes. It expects the rising industry consolidation in cement industry to eventually give producers a higher pricing. Dalmia's profits increased by 37pc on the year to Rs4.4bn over January-March, but the annual profit declined by 18pc to Rs7bn from the year earlier. Dalmia Bharat added approximately 5mn t/yr of cement capacity in 2024-25 to 49.4mn t/yr. It had earlier announced an aspiration to raise cement capacity to 75mn t/yr by 2027-28, but details have not yet been made public. By Ajay Modi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Water levels delay Tennessee River lock reopening


25/04/24
25/04/24

Water levels delay Tennessee River lock reopening

Houston, 24 April (Argus) — The US Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) will delay the reopening of the Tennessee River's Wilson Lock by three weeks after high floodwater disrupted repair plans. The Wilson Lock is now planned to reopen in mid-June or July, the Corps said this week. The lock's main chamber has been closed since September after severe cracks were found in the structure. The Corps initiated evacuation procedures so personnel and equipment could be removed before any water entered the dewatered lock and ruined repairs after high water appeared too close to the lock's edge. The water did not crest above the temporary barrier the Corps installed to keep water out. Delays at the lock averaged around 10 days as of 24 April, according to the Corps. Barge carriers fees have been in place for each barge that must pass through the auxiliary chamber of the lock since 25 September, when the lock first closed. Restricted barge movement placed upward pressure on fertilizer prices in surrounding areas as well. The lock still requires structural repairs to the main chamber gates, including the replacement of the pintle components, the Corps said. This is the fourth opening delay the Corps have issued for the Wilson Lock, with the prior opening dates being in November , then April and then in June . The Wilson Lock will enter its eighth month of repairs next month. By Meghan Yoyotte and Sneha Kumar Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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