
Gypsum industry news
Saint-Gobain revises turnover growth projection for 2015 in Brazil
01 September 2015Brazil: Saint-Gobain will revise its year-on-year turnover growth projection of 7% in Brazil for 2015 as it is expecting volume sales to be lower than 2014, according to Thierry Fournier, the firm's president for Brazil, Argentina and Chile. Turnover is expected to still grow but at a slower rate than 7%, according to Valor Economico.
The building materials producer had to lift prices in the first half of 2015 to compensate for rising energy and US dollar-linked raw material costs. Despite this the group still continues to gain market presence in some segments like drywall.
Saint-Gobain holds a diversified presence in Brazil with divisions manufacturing fibre cement, mortars, wallboard, insulation and glass.
Saint-Gobain buys Structus Building Technologies
29 July 2015US: Saint-Gobain has signed an agreement to purchase Structus Building Technologies, Inc (SBTI) of Bend, Oregon. The company owns one production plant and with 60 employees.
Founded in 1996, Structus is a leading manufacturer of high-performance wallboard corner solutions with a very strong focus on innovation, improving the way the building industry designs and constructs wall systems. Saint-Gobain has distributed Structus products for many years in North America and Europe, making this project a 'natural fit.'
Indonesia: Saint-Gobain is strengthening its presence in Indonesia by increasing its interest from 51% to 100% in PT Cipta Mortar Utama, which specialises in plastering mortars, masonry mortars, tile fixing and façade renders, according to Dow Jones. The company is one of Indonesia's leading manufacturer of industrial mortars with estimated sales of over US$55m in 2015. This acquisition bolsters Saint-Gobain's position in Indonesia, where it is also present in abrasives, plastics and wallboard.
Saint-Gobain enters Tanzanian gypsum market
28 July 2015Tanzania: Saint-Gobain has finalised a deal to form a joint venture in which it owns 50% of the capital of Lodhia Gypsum Industries based in Arusha, Northern Tanzania, according to the National Iraqi News Agency. Lodhia Gypsum Industries makes and sells wallboard in Tanzania, Kenya and neighbouring countries.
Saint-Gobain buys 50% of Lodhia Gypsum Industries
21 July 2015Tanzania: Saint-Gobain has finalised the acquisition of 50% of the capital of Lodhia Gypsum Industries, a leading producer of wallboard in Tanzania. The deal is expected to consolidate Saint-Gobain's leadership in the wallboard segment in east Africa and is in line with the group's strategy to expand its presence in sub-Saharan Africa. Lodhia Gypsum, which makes and distributes wallboard in Tanzania, Kenya and neighbouring countries, employs 90 and has a production plant in Arusha, close to the border with Kenya.
Vietnam: Saint-Gobain has increased its holding in Vinh Tuong Industrial Corp (VTI) from 14.8% to over 57% to consolidate its presence in the country. The deal will reinforce Saint-Gobain's presence in Vietnam, where it already operates a wallboard plant.
VTI is a major player in the Vietnamese construction materials market with expected sales of US$109m in 2015 from wallboard and wall solution sales. Financial details of the transaction were not disclosed.
Hungary: Saint-Gobain's Hungarian wallboard plant generated a revenue of Euro21.9m in 2014, according to Attila Piros, the managing director of the local Rigips unit. Saint-Gobain inaugurated the Euro30m wallboard plant, Hungary's first, in 2008. Since 2012, Rigips has boosted its use of capacity at the plant. In 2014, it used more than half of its installed production capacity.
Cambodia: Thai Gypsum Products, the Thai subsidiary of Saint-Gobain, has signed a joint-agreement with Cambodian company Camstar to expand its distribution networks in Cambodia. French multinational Schneider Electric also signed the agreement. The European companies hope to use Cambodian construction materials firm ISI Group, Camstar's parent company, to connect them to a nationwide distribution network of over 300 outlets and more than 100 contractors, according to local press.
Thai Gypsum Products, which manufactures gypsum used in wallboards for Saint-Gobain's Thai operations, said it saw a 'big opportunity' to expand its networks for gypsum delivery in Cambodia ahead of the upcoming Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) economic community due at the end of the 2015.
"Thailand has been our strong establishment as well as a centre of goods distribution to neighbouring countries," said managing director Richard Juggery. "Now we see a good potential of Cambodia as the country has attracted more foreign investors and performed outstanding business growth in past few years," he added.
Saint-Gobain reports 1.6% growth in operating profit in 2014
26 February 2015France: Saint-Gobain aims to improve underlying operating profit in 2015 and save a further Euro400m. Saint-Gobain saw its 2014 operating profit rise by 1.6% to Euro2.8bn. On a like-for-like basis, the increase came to 7%.
"The group should benefit from good momentum in the US as well as in Asia and emerging countries in 2015," said Saint-Gobain in a statement. "In Western Europe, recovery will be held back by France."
Saint-Gobain derives about 66% of its sales from Europe and 25% from its home market in France. Total sales reached Euro41.1bn in 2014, down by 1.7%. Savings in 2014 reached Euro450m, as predicted in October 2014 when Saint-Gobain said that it aimed to do better than the Euro350m cost savings it had previously targeted for 2015. Saint-Gobain's net income, excluding depreciations and one-off charges, came to Euro1.1bn in 2014.
Sika minority shareholders oppose Saint-Gobain's takeover attempt
19 February 2015Switzerland: Resistance to Saint-Gobain's offer to buy Swiss-based Sika has strengthened as a new group of minority shareholders said that they oppose the deal. Walter Gruebler, a former chairman of Sika's board, as well as other former board members, have said that they are backing the company's management in opposing the Saint-Gobain takeover attempt, Sika said in a statement. The stake held by those former board members represents 1% of Sika's equity.
"This transaction endangers the culture of a great Swiss family company that has been able to evolve over the decades and destroys value for Sika shareholders," said the minority shareholders. "Resistance, represented by the board and the management, is justified."
Sika's management and its board are fiercely fighting an agreement sealed between the Burkard family, which controls Sika and Saint-Gobain in December 2014. The family accepted an offer of Euro2.57bn for its holding company Schenker-Winkler Holding AG, one of Europe's biggest building-materials groups by revenue. The holding company currently holds 52.4% of the voting rights in Sika, but only 16.1% of the shares.
The sale would give Saint-Gobain control without having to make an offer for the remaining 83.9% owned by shareholders. The deal is unfair for minority shareholders, the management has said. Sika has said that shareholders representing more than 35% of its total capital have given their assurance that they support the board of directors in its efforts to fend off the takeover.