Skip to main content

Dangote Cement Records N292bn Revenue, N106bn Profit in Six Months


 Dangote Cement Plc has reported a revenue of N292billion for the half year ended June 30, 2016, indicating an increase of 20 per cent over N242billion posted in the corresponding period in 2015.

According to the reports filed with the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), profit before tax rose to N229.9billion in 2016, from N145.6billion in 2015. However, Profit after tax fell by 14 per cent to N106.3billion, compared with N123.1billion in the corresponding period of 2015.

A further analysis of the performance showed that the fall in profit for half year resulted from foreign exchange loss of about N101 billion which shot up the finance cost to N118 billion in 2016, up from N24.381 billion in 2015.

Commenting on the results, the Chief Executive Officer of Dangote Cement Plc, Mr.  Onne Van der Weijde said: “We have achieved a commendable result, given the very challenging situation in our main market and general economic weakening across Africa.”

He said the management would continue to respond to the prevailing operating environment with strategically thought measures for the organisation to maintain its leadership and profitability.

Speaking on the expansion, he added: “While the company remains committed to its ambitious plans, we are taking a more measured approach to the roll-out of new capacity across Africa.”

Dangote Cement has more than doubled production capacity since 2013 and said in April it may increase cement capacity by a further 77 per cent by the end of 2019. However, foreign exchange constraints in Nigeria have prompted the company to reconsider the pace of its expansion and now believes a five-year building program is more appropriate, it said.

According to the company, earnings in the period were affected by lower selling prices, higher fuel costs and the fact that several new plants are still in less-efficient start up phases.

“Cement sales volumes in the period increased 60 per cent, bolstered by record volumes in its home market, where the company announced a price cut last September, as well as new plants elsewhere on the continent. The devaluation of the naira will affect costs in the country and Dangote will seek to protect its profit margins,” Van der Weijde  said.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Understanding Prof. Yemi Osinbajo - Abraham Ogbodo

Abraham Ogbodo I am trying to understand Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, the Vice President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Often, he speaks out of character. That is, he talks as if he is Vice President before he is a professor of law, even when I know that the latter comes first. The man wasn’t like this when he was the attorney general of Lagos State and a teacher at the Law Faculty of the University of Lagos. Then, his statements were measured and as a seasoned lawyer, based on facts. But today, Osinbajo is sounding like Adams Oshiomhole, a union leader, who by the grace of God, became governor of Edo State for eight years. The revelations about big thefts in the economy had come more from Adams than even Ibrahim Magu, chairman of the EFCC. It was Adams who said former petroleum minister; Mrs. Diezani Allison-Madueke alone stole 13 billion British pounds from the national treasury. That is like saying she stole in raw cash almost twice as much as the entire fortune of Alhaj...

Much ado about the foreign reserves - Nonso Obikili

I have received a lot of questions about the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) foreign reserves recently. The CBN has of course been touting the reserves growing from a low of about $24bn to the approximately $42bn it is now. The questions typically centre around why we are keeping so much in reserve when the economy is struggling, and we have poor infrastructure? Why don’t we use the reserves to reduce the poverty that is rampant? The question typically betrays a little bit of misunderstanding over what the foreign reserves are and how the entire thing works. Hopefully, after reading this we will have a better understanding of what it is and what it can and can’t be used for. First, what is the “Foreign Reserves?” It is the amount of foreign exchange that the central bank has at its disposal at any point in time. Some of this is in cash and some in other liquid assets, that is assets that can quickly be turned to cash. Some of this is in US dollars but sometimes it’s in other c...

Boko Haram’s campaign against education and enlightenment - By Landry Signe

Nelson Mandela once said, “Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.” Boko Haram, the Islamist terrorist group originating from Nigeria is frightened by this enlightening power of education. Unsurprisingly, on Monday, February 19, the group, whose name often translates to “Western education is a sin,” stormed a girls’ school in the village of Dapchi in northern Nigeria to abduct students. Of the 907 schoolgirls who were in the school the day of the attack, more than 100 are still missing as of Sunday. Since it became violent about a decade ago, Boko Haram’s actions, through these and other types of bloody attacks, have resulted in horrifying consequences. Human Rights Watch estimates that Boko Haram has left at least 7 million in need of humanitarian assistance, 2.1 million displaced, and 20,000 civilians dead. Local leaders claim the number is significantly higher. Despite such causalities, it took Boko Haram’s massive kidnapping of 276 sch...