Latest News
-
Heidelberg Products buys US firm Giant Cement for $600 mln
Heidelberg Materials has actually struck an offer to buy U.S. business Giant Cement Holding and its subsidiaries for $600 million, it said on Thursday, the current acquisition by the German company to expand its grip in the United States. The deal, to be finished in the first quarter of 2025, is expected to contribute around $60 million in incomes before interest, taxes, devaluation and amortisation (EBITDA). in the first year of operation, before significant additional. synergies, Heidelberg stated in a declaration. The acquisition ... will even more enhance our cement. footprint in the growing Southeastern U.S. and New England. markets, stated Chris Ward, CEO of Heidelberg Materials North. America. Huge Cement Holding was owned by Mexican billionaire. Carlos Slim's Spanish cement and property unit Inmocemento. which will schedule a capital gain of $145 million on the. asset sale, the Spanish company said in a different filing to the. Spanish stock exchange regulator. Inmocemento was spun off from Slim's Spanish corporation. FCC previously this month.
-
Remy Cointreau CEO: Trump's proposed 10% tariff would not eliminate us
Remy Cointreau would have the ability to deal with a 10% tariff on foreign items, mainly by means of expense cuts, if imposed by incoming U.S. President Donald Trump, CEO Eric Vallat said on Thursday. Trump has proposed tariffs of 10% on all foreign made goods imported into the United States in a quote to eliminate the nation's trade deficit, which would impact spirits including Remy's cognacs, which can just be made in France. 10% is not going to eliminate us is for sure, Vallat said, adding there would be an unfavorable effect however not as substantial as that of tariffs presently troubled its products in China. Beijing has actually set provisionary tasks of up to 40% on European Union brandy as part of a trade dispute with bloc. Vallat stated Remy would concentrate on cost cutting and margin optimisation to offset any U.S. tariffs, though it could likewise boost prices. Another method formerly utilized by business in various industries to alleviate the impact of tariffs is to ship stock into a country ahead of threatened responsibilities being imposed. Vallat stated Remy was considering every possibility and handling its organization as wisely as possible, but declined to sophisticated.
-
Energean reduces 2024 production outlook, Israel operations unaffected
Gas manufacturer Energean on Thursday reduced its fullyear 2024 production projection due to lower sales in Israel owing to bad weather. The business expects 2024 production to be between 150,000 and 155,000 barrels of oil comparable per day (boepd), compared with its prior forecast of 155,000-165,000 boepd. Third-quarter production balanced 135,000 boepd, it included, above brokerage Peel Hunt Research's price quote of 120,000 boepd for the quarter. This reduction [in forecast] is due to Israel, which shows lower than anticipated sales in November owing to weather conditions and market characteristics and, for the lower end, an assumption of flat month-on-month sales for December, Energean stated in a statement. However, the business included that everyday production in Israel stays untouched by the continuous geopolitical advancements. Our operations continue to deliver energy security to Israel and the wider region through the optimisation of production from our FPSO (drifting production storage and unloading), which has been running at 99% uptime, said Mathios Rigas, CEO of Energean. Energean is producing increasing volumes of gas and oil from its flagship Karish field, overseas Israel, stated experts at Peel Hunt, including that they anticipate 2025 to be another year of robust delivery.
-
Iron ore wanders sideways as strong steel outlook offsets soft China information
Rates of iron ore futures swept within a narrow range on Thursday, as traders weighed stronger prospects for China's steel market versus weaker economic data from the world's leading customer. The most-traded January iron ore contract on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) ended daytime trade flat at 786.5 yuan ($ 108.54) a metric lot, snapping a three-day winning streak. The benchmark December iron ore on the Singapore Exchange was down 0.34% at $103.45 a ton, as of 0708 GMT. Steel benchmarks on the Shanghai Futures Exchange, however, made headway. Rebar and wire rod enhanced about 0.4%, hot-rolled coil edged 0.26%. higher, and stainless-steel advanced nearly 0.7%. The steel sector has shown indications of enhancement in recent. months, ANZ experts said in a note. Strong exports and falling stocks have actually assisted, while. gains in steel output have continued through November. Cumulative losses in China's steel industry diminished to 23. billion yuan in January-October from 34 billion yuan over the. first nine months of the year, ANZ said, mentioning data from the. National Bureau of Stats. Improved steel mill revenues contributed to the improved tone,. with the marketplace focused on the Chinese Politburo meeting due. early in December and the Central Economic Work Conference. mid-December, Westpac experts said. China is both the world's leading customer and manufacturer of the. metal. Still, the nation's commercial earnings extended declines in. October to fall 10% year-on-year, weighed down by deflation. pressures and soft need in its damaging economy. Fresh headwinds from higher U.S. tariffs could likewise threaten. China's commercial sector next year, decreasing export revenues. Chinese state media on Tuesday alerted U.S. President-elect. Donald Trump his pledge to impose extra tariffs on China's. imports could drag the world's top two economies into a mutually. damaging tariff war. Other steelmaking active ingredients on the DCE extended declines,. with coking coal and coke down 0.84% and. 1.79%, respectively.
-
India's financing ministry examining removal of windfall tax, govt source says
India's finance ministry is assessing the relevance of windfall tax, a federal government source said on Thursday. Enforced in July 2022, the windfall tax is an unique levy on domestic petroleum production, presented after rising global unrefined rates, to record profits from windfall gains made by manufacturers. In addition to the petroleum levy, the federal government also imposed unique taxes on exports of diesel, gas, and aviation turbine fuel. By the end of August, the windfall tax on locally produced crude oil was decreased to 1,850 Indian rupees ($ 21.90) per tonne, eventually dropping to no reliable from Sept. 18. The windfall tax on export of diesel and aviation turbine fuel was also eliminated. The federal financing ministry is now looking at the collections from windfall tax and studying the crude cost trend before taking a call on ditching the levy, the source stated. The federal finance ministry will examine scrapping windfall tax on domestic petroleum output, Tarun Kapoor, advisor to the Indian prime minister, said last month. The officials said after decline in global petroleum prices, there was little validation for preserving the tax.
-
Nissan October production down globally except in Mexico, but Trump tariff danger looms
Nissan Motor said on Thursday its international production fell for a fifth straight month in October, led by downshifts at most of its production centers except for Mexico. While worldwide sales also dropped for a seventh month, sales in Nissan's core market, the United States, grew for the first time in 3 months. Nissan earlier this month announced strategies to axe 9,000 jobs and 20% of its manufacturing capability internationally to cut costs, after the third-biggest Japanese carmaker behind Toyota and Honda suffered sales slumps in China and the U.S. . The risk of U.S. tariffs is now clouding the struggling car manufacturer's restructuring efforts. Nissan's worldwide output for October reduced 6% from the very same month a year previously to 290,848 vehicles. Production both in the U.S. and China fell 15%, while output in Britain plunged 23% and production in Japan shrank 4%. A brilliant spot was Mexico, where production increased 12% to 70,382 cars. That meant nearly one in four Nissan automobiles worldwide was made in Mexico last month. Nevertheless, that might come under pressure as U.S. President-elect Donald Trump this week said he would enforce a. 25% tariff on imports from Canada and Mexico upon taking office. in January. Nissan has actually exported some 300,000 vehicles from Mexico to. the U.S. this year, and will closely keep track of tariff strategies, Chief. Executive Makoto Uchida stated quickly after Trump's re-election. In October, Nissan offered 13% more lorries in the U.S., its. very first growth given that July, led by compact sedan Sentra. Nissan's. sales likewise rose in Mexico and Canada however fell by double-digit. rates in China and Europe to lead to a 3% drop globally. By contrast, Toyota's international sales increased 1.4% to mark. the very first increase in 5 months in October, while its worldwide. production continued to decrease due in part to a production. stop in the U.S.
-
Asia's November crude oil imports push greater, still heading for yearly fall: Russell
Asia's imports of petroleum ticked up somewhat in November, led by a recovery by leading importer China, however arrivals are still on track to be weaker this year than in 2023. The leading crude-buying area is anticipated to import 26.42 million barrels each day (bpd) in November, up marginally from October's 26.11 million bpd and 26.24 million bpd in September, according to data compiled by LSEG Oil Research. The continuous run of soft month-to-month imports in Asia is most likely to weigh on OPEC+'s deliberations this weekend, with the market expecting that the exporter group will when again delay its prepared increases in output. In spite of the little November rise, Asia's crude imports are still likely to fall in 2024, confounding projections of increasing demand made by groups such as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and the International Energy Agency. For the very first 11 months of the year, Asia's unrefined imports were 26.52 million bpd, down 370,000 bpd from the 26.89 million bpd tracked by LSEG for the same duration in 2023. The decline in imports stands in contrast to OPEC's most recent forecast for Asia's oil need to expand by 1.04 million bpd in 2024 from the previous year. The exporter group's November market report said China would increase its need by 450,000 bpd, while the continent's. second-biggest importer India would see a rise of 250,000 bpd. and the rest of Asia starting with 340,000 bpd. OPEC has been cutting its forecasts for Asia's oil demand. development every month given that July, when its report estimated Asia's. need would expand by 1.34 million bpd in 2024. The main decrease in OPEC's forecasts has actually been in China,. where the group has gone from expecting 2024 need to lift by. 760,000 bpd in the July report, to anticipating a gain of 450,000. bpd by November. While China's November crude imports are expected by LSEG to. can be found in at a three-month high of 11.62 million bpd, the world's. top importer is still on track to tape-record lower arrivals this. year. For the first 10 months of 2024 China's crude imports were. 10.94 million bpd, down 3.7%, or 420,000 bpd from the same. period in 2023, according to estimations based upon customs data. While OPEC and other forecasters are slowly capturing up. to the truth of China's weak crude imports, the market pricing. has actually reflected the dynamic for a long time. STEADY RATES Worldwide criteria Brent futures have been trending. weaker since reaching the high so far this year of $92.18 a. barrel on April 12. They dropped to a 33-month low of $69.19 a barrel on Sept. 10 and have traded largely sideways ever since, ending at $72.83. on Wednesday. When there have been spikes higher in the rate, it's. typically been driven by reports of intensifying geopolitical. tensions in the Middle East and in between Russia and Ukraine,. rather than by any shift in the supply-demand principles. It's those fundamentals that will be front of mind for. members of the OPEC+ group when they hold a meeting on Dec. 1. The group, which combines OPEC and allies including. Russia, is anticipated to again delay an organized boost in output. OPEC+, which pumps about half the world's oil, had actually planned. to gradually roll back oil production cuts with small boosts. over numerous months in 2024 and 2025. But the soft need in Asia, and especially in China, has. put the kibosh on those plans and analysts now expect any. increase in output only to occur after the very first quarter of. next year. The views revealed here are those of the author, a writer. .
-
Oil slips on buildup in US gas stocks; eyes on weekend OPEC+ meeting
Oil costs wandered lower on Thursday after a surprise dive in U.S. gasoline stocks, with financiers focusing on the OPEC+ conference this weekend to discuss oil output policy. Brent unrefined futures fell by 14 cents, or 0.2%, to $ 72.69 per barrel by 0401 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures were also down 14 cents, or 0.2%, at $68.58 a barrel. Trading is anticipated to be light due to U.S. Thanksgiving vacation starting from Thursday. Oil is most likely to hold to its near-term bearish momentum as the dangers of supply disruption fade in the Middle East and coming from the higher-than-expected U.S. gas inventories, said Yeap Jun Rong, a market strategist at IG. U.S. fuel stocks rose 3.3 million barrels in the week ended on Nov. 22, the U.S. Energy Information Administration ( EIA) stated on Wednesday, countering expectations for a small attract fuel stocks ahead of record vacation travel. Slowing fuel demand growth in leading consumers the United States and China has actually taxed oil costs this year, although supply curtailments from OPEC+, which groups the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries with Russia and other allies, have actually limited the losses. OPEC+ will fulfill on Sunday. 2 sources from the producer group told Reuters on Tuesday that members have been talking about a more hold-up to a planned oil output hike that was due to start in January. An additional deferment, as anticipated by numerous in the market, has primarily been factored into oil rates already, stated Suvro Sarkar, energy sector team lead at DBS Bank. The only concern is whether it's a one-month pushback, or three-month, and even longer. That would offer the oil market some instructions. On the other hand, we would be stressed over a dip in oil costs if the deferments don't come, he stated. The group, which pumps about half the world's oil, had formerly said it would slowly roll back oil production cuts with small increases over many months in 2024 and 2025. Brent and WTI have actually lost more than 3% each up until now today, under pressure from Israel's arrangement to a ceasefire handle Lebanon's Hezbollah group. The ceasefire started on Wednesday and assisted relieve concerns that the conflict could interrupt oil products from the top producing Middle East area. Market individuals doubt the length of time the break in the combating will hold, with the wider geopolitical backdrop for oil staying dirty, experts at ANZ Bank stated. Oil rates are underestimated due to a market deficit, heads of products research at Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley warned in recent days, likewise pointing to a prospective danger to Iranian supply from sanctions that might be carried out under U.S. President-elect Donald Trump.
Copper dips as dollar companies, Trump's tariff danger clouds demand outlook
Copper costs eased on Thursday, pressed by a more powerful dollar and concerns that possible U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods could moisten metals consumption.
Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME). relieved 0.1% to $9,013.50 per metric lot by 0555 GMT,. while the most-traded January copper agreement on the Shanghai. Futures Exchange (SHFE) dipped 0.2% to 73,830 yuan. ($ 10,190.19) a load.
The dollar index edged higher, making. greenback-priced metals more pricey to holders of other. currencies.
Previously today, U.S. President-elect Donald Trump said he. will impose an additional 10% tariffs on all Chinese items after. he takes office in January.
Copper rates will be trading within a tight range for the. short-term as individuals are waiting for more information on Trump's. policies and how the Chinese federal government responds to them, stated. expert Matt Huang at broker BANDS Financial.
Some financiers are also waiting for crucial policy meetings in. China and companies' incomes reports to assess their annual. efficiencies, he said.
We will be here for a while but if the U.S. dollar. diminishes a lot copper cost will increase, Huang said.
Nevertheless, supporting copper at $9,000, an essential resistance. level, is solid purchasing from China.
It's everything about the absolute price. At $9,000 they will purchase. more, Huang said.
Copper inventories in SHFE warehouses << CU-STX-SGH > dropped. to their lowest because Feb. 5 at 120,236 heaps.
LME aluminium alleviated 0.2% to $2,588 a heap, while. nickel rose 0.9% to $16,025, zinc edged down. 0.8% at $3,107, lead increased 0.3% to $2,063 and tin. fell 0.2% to $27,900.
SHFE aluminium fell 1.2% to 20,305 yuan a lot, tin. dropped 2% to 233,290 yuan, while nickel rose. 0.4% to 127,060 yuan, zinc climbed up 0.4% to 25,675 yuan. and lead innovative 1% to 17,405 yuan.
For the top stories in metals and other news, click. or
(source: Reuters)