CEMEX posts
FeedPosted Jan 15th 2009 2:40PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: International markets, Rants and raves, Exxon Mobil (XOM), Venezuela, Market matters, Scandals, Oil, CEMEX S.A.B. de C.V. (CX)

What goes around comes around... and Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan "socialist" president who keeps promoting perpetual referendums to stay in power, has
turned his recent attention back to those capitalist dogs he despises so much to bail him out of a tight jam.
After nationalizing agriculture, mining, power and building materials companies over the past few years, which pushed capital flight, Venezuela was reliant on oil for about 93 percent of its export revenue in 2008, up from 69 percent in 1998 when Mr. Chávez was first elected, according to a
story in the NY Times.While the socialist (authoritarian) in him is unhappy as oil is now trading around $35 a barrel today, dealing a severe blow to his misguided notions of economics, the pragmatic side of the former military man is biting his tongue and reaching out to all the major international oil companies he chased off only a short while ago. He is asking them to return and invest to expand exploration, maintain and modernize current facilities and improve over all productivity.
The question is:
On what basis would a foreign enterprise dedicate its financial and technical resources to an agreement with a partner that has already ignored previous agreements?Exxon Mobil (NYSE:
XOM) and
CEMEX S. A. B. (NYSE:
CX) are currently in litigation with the Chavez government. The Chinese and their nationally integrated oil companies have not done well either and remain apprehensive.
How can any deal get done? If it was being done on a smaller scale, you might use third party escrow accounts and ask for money to be set aside in advance, but Venezuela is cash strapped and would find this difficult to do.
One metaphor begets another, so from "what goes around comes around" I end with: Mr. Chavez, we would be happy to come back, but first we will have to see
"cash on the barrel-head!"
Sheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the principal for design and research at an architecture & planning firm. He writes the columns Chasing Value and Serious Money. DISCLOSURE: I own shares of CX but not XOM .
Posted Dec 20th 2008 2:00PM by Steven Halpern (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newsletters, Mexico, Commodities, Stocks to Buy, CEMEX S.A.B. de C.V. (CX), Obama Picks
This post is part of a special report, A Dozen Ways to Play an Obama Building Boom.
"I think we have bottomed in some sectors, including commodities and materials," explains Glenn Rogers. In Internet Wealth Builder, he explains, "President-elect Obama has said he will pour hundreds of billions into projects.
"The Chinese and the Europeans have also committed to huge amounts to infrastructure spending." Here, he looks at one play on this trend -- Cemex (NYSE: CX).
"If you want to venture back into the stock market at this point and you're a long-term investor, my advice is to buy high-quality names with low P/E ratios, no debt coming due next year, and the sustainable ability to pay a dividend.
"Late last month, this Mexican cement giant traded as low as $4.01. Then President-elect Obama announced his plan to spend billions on infrastructure projects and guess what happened?
"The share price shot up on the expectation that infrastructure spending will translate into a growing demand for cement.
"Cemex shares traded as high as $11.35 before pulling back to close the week at $8.16. That's still more than double the November low but this is a stock that was trading at over $30 last June so it still looks like good value at this level.
Continue reading Cemex (CMX): 'Solid' play on infrastructure
Posted Oct 9th 2008 10:16AM by Paul Foster (RSS feed)
Filed under: Options
America Movil (NYSE: AMX), a provider of wireless telecommunications service in Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, Columbia & Ecuador, closed at $33.88. AMX overall option implied volatility of 83 is above its 26-week average of 43 according to Track Data, suggesting larger price movement.
Telmex (NYSE: TMX), an operator of wireline telecommunication systems in Mexico, closed at $22.64. TMX November option implied volatility of 63 is above its 26-week average of 35 according to Track Data, suggesting larger price movement.
Cemex (NYSE: CX), an international producer, distributor and marketer of cement, closed at $10.12. Smith Barney says "Tougher times ahead; downgrading to Hold." CX November option implied volatility of 122 is above its 26-week average of 45 according to Track Data, suggesting larger price movement.
Option Update is provided by Stock Specialist Paul Foster of theflyonthewall.com.
Posted Aug 26th 2008 2:15PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: International markets, Other issues, Bad news, Rants and raves, Venezuela, Scandals, Politics, Headline news, CEMEX S.A.B. de C.V. (CX)
In the margins of Barron's this week there was a smallish note about the government of Venezuela nationalizing Cemex's (NYSE: CX) operations in that country. For some reason the government of Hugo Chavez thinks that stealing all of the private companies in 'his' country will lead to greater prosperity for 'his' people.
While it is a long journey from Venezuela to Zimbabwe, with its exponential inflation rate and a near-total economic breakdown, every journey begins with a first step. Mr. Chavez will move much closer to this inevitable outcome if he continues on his chosen path.
Motley Fool has a good write-up on the subject in which they detail the sour relations between Chavez and foreign businesses. Chavez recently offered to re-open negotiations with Cemex, but since he has already decided to take the company, that offer is suspect -- you can't negotiate with a gun pointing at you. To date, Chavez has nationalized the telecommunications industry, electricity, and oil. How many steps down the road is that? Why would anyone want to invest in Venezuela?
Continue reading Could Venezuela become Zimbabwe? Ask Cemex
Posted Nov 10th 2007 1:10PM by Steven Halpern (RSS feed)
Filed under: India, China, Brazil, Russia, Newsletters, Caterpillar (CAT), Mexico, Commodities, Stocks to Buy
This article is part of a 20 article special report on "Metals, miners and money".
A highlight at the recent New Orleans Investment Conference was a speech by Frank Holmes, CEO of US Global Investors, on "mega-trends" -- with a focus on global infrastructure needs, from the U.S. to China.
Here, we offer excerpts from his speech, as well as some specific stock ideas from Frank Holmes and US Global Investors' Chief Strategist, Jack Dzierwa.
"Megatrends are usually defined by sustainable and substantial growth in capital expenditures in any country or sector. They can be created by governmental policies for infrastructure or a massive technological breakthrough.
"We isolate megatrends through a series of proprietary models, including a top down analysis of such issues as global macroeconomic theme, regional and country trends, technological trends, government policies, and currency effects. As examples of megatrends:
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1950s -- 1960s Megatrend: Massive growth of infrastructure in the U.S. and Europe leads to post-war prosperity, creating a wealth effect and consumer culture.
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1990s -- Present Megatrend: Moore's Law and disruptive technologies lead to massive growth in information technology and data communications.
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2000 and beyond Megatrend: Unprecedented change in global growth driven by globalization, urbanization, and wealth creation leads to a global infrastructure boom on a massive, intractable scale.
Continue reading Top resource ideas: US Global on mega-trends
Posted Jun 29th 2007 10:10AM by Kevin Shult (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Palm Inc (PALM)
MOST NOTEWORTHY: Komag Incorporated (NASDAQ:
KOMG), commercial mortgage REITs,
Getty Images Inc (NYSE:
GYI) and
Rural/Metro Corporation (NASDAQ:
RURL) were today's noteworthy downgrades:
- Komag was downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Craig-Hallum, to Market Perform from Outperform at Piper Jaffray, to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank and to Neutral from Outperform at Robert W Baird & Co following the announcement it would be acquired by Western Digital Corporation (NYSE: WDC).
- Morgan Stanley downgraded Commercial Mortgage REITs to Underweight from Neutral. Specifically, the firm downgraded shares of Capital Trust, Inc (NYSE: CT) to Equal Weight from Underweight and Gramercy Capital Corp (NYSE: GKK) to Underweight from Equal Weight, citing increased credit spreads and subordination levels.
- Getty Images was downgraded to Sell from Hold at Matrix as the firm believes margins are declining and sees downside to their $40/share intrinsic value calculation.
- Rural/Metro was downgraded by Ferris, Baker Watts to Neutral from Buy on valuation.
OTHER DOWNGRADES:
Analyst summaries provided by TheFlyOnTheWall.com (subscription required).Posted Jun 11th 2007 3:25PM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Dell (DELL), Bargain stocks
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Longleaf Funds, a long-term track record of excellent results, was featured in
Barron's mutual fund section over the weekend. What is Mason Hawkins investing in? His largest position is in
Dell Inc (NASDAQ:
DELL) equaling 7.6% of holdings.
Japan was also a big theme with investments in NipponKoa Insurance, Olympus, Nikko Cordial, being all top holdings. Other Asian holdings included Chueng Kong and
Fairfax Financial Holdings Limited (NYSE:
FFH).
Mexico-based
Cemex Sab De CV (NYSE:
CX) also topped the list along with European holdings Renault and Nestle.
Regarding U.S. holdings, in addition to Dell,
Ingersoll-Rand Company Limited (NYSE:
IR) was at the top of the list.
One theme was certain, Hawkins is allocating a lot more of his capital outside the United States. Prior to this decade, Longleaf and Hawkins were not big international investors.
Posted May 7th 2007 11:48AM by Kevin Shult (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the bell, Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Good news, Abbott Laboratories (ABT), Darden Restaurants (DRI), UAL Corp (UAUA)
MOST NOTEWORTHY: Cablevision Systems Corp (CVC), UAL Corp (UAUA), Abbott Laboratories (ABT), Darden Restaurants (DRI) and the food industry were today's noteworthy upgrades:
- Citigroup upgraded Cablevision (NYSE: CVC) to Hold from Sell with a $36 target to reflect the Dolan's bid for the company.
- Credit Suisse upgraded shares of UAL Corp (NASDAQ: UAUA) to Outperform from Neutral citing valuation and capacity reductions.
- Abbott Labs (NYSE: ABT) was upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Lehman Brothers citing valuation and potential upside in the pharma business.
- Bear Stearns raised Darden Restaurants (NYSE: DRI) to Outperform from Peer Perform citing the announcement of the divestiture of Smokey Bones, which takes away a drag on earnings.
- Wachovia upgraded the food industry to Overweight from Equal Weight, saying food companies are beginning to drive higher prices through the supply chain and yields look attractive.
OTHER UPGRADES:
- Buckingham raised DSW Inc (NYSE: DSW) to Accumulate from Neutral with a $46 target.
- Deutsche Bank upgraded Cemex ADS (NYSE: CX) to Buy from Hold with a $41 target.
Analyst summaries provided by TheFlyOnTheWall.com (subscription required).Posted Mar 23rd 2007 4:35PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Columns, Mexico, Bargain stocks, Chasing Value
Looking to put new money in the market and trying to build my portfolio on a stable foundation, I find myself thinking about concrete.
The top three cement companies are all headquartered outside of the United States. The number three producer CEMEX S.A. B de C.V. (ADR) (NYSE:CX) is in near by Mexico and the number one producer LaFarge ADS (NYSE:LR) is French owned. The number two producer is a great Swiss company, HOLCIM, but its shares are only traded over-the-counter on the so-called "pink sheets," and those I won't touch.
Continue reading Chasing Value: Cemex and LaFarge look solid
Posted Feb 26th 2007 10:36AM by Victoria Erhart (RSS feed)
Filed under: International markets, Earnings reports, Good news
CEMEX (NYSE:CX), Mexico's giant maker of cement, has quietly continued to grow both its income and its revenue through strategic acquisitions and market share expansion. Currently the world's biggest concrete producer by volume, with an annual volume of 2.6 billion cubic feet, CEMEX now operates in over 50 countries worldwide, and is looking for opportunities in China, Brazil, Russia and India. But even without operations in these rapidly growing countries, CEMEX posted a 3.5% global growth rate for the first half of 2006, earning a profit of over $1 billion on revenues of $8.6 billion. CEMEX is currently sitting on free cash flow of $2.5 billion.
According to an interview with CEO Lorenzo Zambrano in NYSE Magazine (October-November 2006), CEMEX has perfected the art of integrating recent acquisitions into CEMEX in order to achieve highly efficient results. Zambrano is particularly proud of CEMEX's efficiency in energy consumption. While energy cost of cement production rose 118% for the period 2001-2005, CEMEX's energy cost per ton increased only 11%, due in large measure to a relentless effort to curb inefficiencies in all aspects of production, delivery and inventory. Unlike other cement production companies, CEMEX runs its plants on petroleum coke, a solid fuel by-product of oil refining. Annual energy savings amount to $75 million.
Continue reading CEMEX: A solid investment