The Star Early Edition

Company cuts its price for cement in Nigeria

- Liezel Hill and Emele Onu

DANGOTE Cement, Africa’s largest producer of the building material, cut prices in its home market of Nigeria in an attempt to boost cement consumptio­n and compete with imports.

The price cuts to its 3X cement brand by 6 000 naira (about R400) per ton would still allow Dangote to achieve strong returns, chief executive Onne van der Weijde said yesterday. The Lagos-based company was also hoping the lower prices would help increase export sales to neighbouri­ng nations, he said.

Dangote Cement, con- trolled by Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, is seeking to grow sales and protect market share in Nigeria, while rapidly expanding elsewhere in sub-Saharan Africa.

The company has grappled with fuel shortages in its home market this year that have hurt demand, and in December it raised prices to protect profit margins amid a devaluing local currency.

Nigeria, Africa’s biggest crude producer, has been hobbled by a halving of oil prices in the past year and the toll of an Islamist insurgency in the country’s north.

“We hope that reducing the cost of cement will help to stimulate building work across Nigeria at a time when the economy is in need of a boost,” Van der Weijde said.

“We believe our cost-saving initiative­s and new pricing strategy will help to support the naira by reducing unnecessar­y imports and by enabling us to generate valuable foreign exchange earnings.”

About 42 percent of Dangote Cement’s sales by volume were sold outside of Nigeria in July, the company said, compared with 22 percent in the first six months of the year, and just 8 percent in 2014.

Before the price increase in December, Dangote had reduced the cost of cement in November, causing a more than 20 percent slump in the market. Paris-based Lafarge is Dangote’s largest competitor in Nigeria.

“Competitio­n has no choice but to bring down the price, because Dangote is the market leader,” said Pabina Yinkere, the head of research at Lagos-based Vetiva Capital Management.

“The last time they reduced the price it was not sustained because they had logistics problems with their distributi­on.”

Dangote Cement shares have fallen 13 percent this year to 174 naira. – Bloomberg

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