Friday April 13, 2012
By CHOONG EN HAN
han@thestar.com.my
PETALING JAYA: The local cement industry is in
for a re-rating due to the increasing demand for the building material when the
construction of mega projects gains momentum.
Although there might still be a supply
overhang in the industry, an analyst with a regional brokerage said demand
would surge when the construction of the RM30bil My Rapid Transit (MRT) project
kicked off.
The four major industry players may see the
construction sector lapping up what they could produce as not only are the big
players clamouring for the raw material, the local developers and contractors
are also looking for supply.
The industry is dominated by Cement Industries of Malaysia Bhd
(CIMA),Lafarge Malayan Cement Bhd, YTL Cement Bhd and Tasek Corp Bhdcommanding 96% of
the market share.
”We may not see a sudden surge in demand, but
a steady climb in demand will see cement producers going on overdrive. Having
said that, planned new capacity of these companies would still be supportive of
demand,” he said.
Last year the industry players were only
running at an installed capacity utilisation rate of 75% to 85%, and generally,
cement cost makes up between 50% and 60% of concrete products.
Combined, the cement industry is capable of
churning out 24.7 million tonnes of cement annually, while producing another
18.3 million tonnes of clinker per year.
“The price of cement is between RM280 and
RM290 per tonne, and the companies are still facing stiff price competition
with each other. Supply and demand would likely dictate the price direction in
the future,” he pointed out.
”Not only would the MRT be a catalyst, other
projects that are in the works include the Iskandar
development region, the Northern Corridor Economic Region, and also the East
Coast Economic Region.
“With the Government pushing through with
developments to ensure the next phase of economic growth, the first few sectors
that would benefit are the building material industries like steel, cement, and
polymer products,” he said.
According to historical reports, the
construction of the North-South Expressway in the late 1980s benefited the
construction sector and its supporting industries.
Demand for cement jumped 42% between 1987 and
1989, backed by a corresponding 21% growth in construction volume, with the
then RM8bil project resulting in 20% higher employment from 1987 to 1990.
The analyst said several other projects in
need of substantial supply of cement were the Light Railway Transit extension
and the West Coast Expressway.
There is some softening in demand from the
property sector, and the increased activity seen in the infrastructure would
partially offset the demand gap from the residential sector.
However, investors seeking an exposure in the
cement industry has two options, namely Lafarge and Tasek which are still
active for trading.
CIMA had been privatised several years ago by
parent UEM Group Bhd, and YTL Cement is
undergoing a de-listing process after parent YTL Corp Bhd made a RM1.06bil offer in December to
buy out YTL Cement through a share swap.
Last year, Lafarge raked in RM317mil on a
revenue of RM2.55bil, YTL Cement made RM167.9mil from a revenue of RM1.1bil,
and Tasek profited RM103mil from RM566mil in revenue.
The latest records of CIMA in
2010 showed that it had generated RM140mil in pre-tax profit on revenue of
RM994mil
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