Mexico's love for building things with concrete could have
kept Cementos Mexicanos quite content in its role as the top producer of
cement products in a burgeoning national market. Instead, the
Monterrey-based Cemex went global. And it went global in a big way.
So big, in fact, that it blossomed into the third-largest cement
company in the world, and the largest producer of ready mix, the product
containing all the ingredients needed for concrete. With facilities in
50 countries, Cemex holds far and away the strongest international
presence of any home-grown, non-state (i.e. not Pemex) Mexican company
in existence.
That presence just got stronger. With the US$4.1 billion
acquisition of UK cement giant RMC officially in effect as of March of
this year, Cemex has increased its profit potential and its
international reach (as well as its by no means modest debt, cautious
observers point out).
Before the RMC deal, Cemex cash flow was essentially split 50-50
between Mexico and the rest of the world. Now some two-thirds of it is
expected to come from non-Mexican soil.
The RMC merger also upped Cemex's profile in Europe, where RMC
did two-thirds of its business. While Cemex was already No. 1 in Spain,
its presence across Europe was mostly via trading.
"We were patient," says Hector Medina, executive
vice-president of planning and finance. "But now we have good
positions on into Eastern Europe."
"Patient" is not exactly the first word that comes to
mind when describing the aggressive acquisition policy that has
catapulted Cemex to world-class status. Taking off with a US$1.8 billion
move into Spain in 1992, company President Lorenzo Zambrano refused to
succumb to the then-prominent stereotype of the stay-at-home, too-risky
Mexican company.
He soon moved into South America and the Caribbean. In 2000, he
stunned the world by purchasing Houston-based Southdown, making Cemex
the top cement producer in the United States. Asia and North Africa were
next.
Making It Work Globally
Going global is one thing. Making it work is another. Observers
agree that Cemex proved itself worthy by having mastered the basic
efficiencies--inventory management, cultural sensitivity, just-in-time
delivery, to name a few--that are make-or-break in a competitive
international market.
Also, Cemex leaders like to point out that their geographic
diversification isn't haphazard; rather, their international
presence is strategically situated to take full advantage of economic
cycles that vary from region to region.
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But what probably sets Cemex apart from the second-tier global
players is the centralized structure of its sprawling empire.
"We run all our global operations as one," Medina says.
"It's a back office company. We have one treasury for the
world."
Connectivity and universal standards dominate the big picture.
Immediate post-merger integration ensures any newly acquired company
gets melded into the operations network quickly.
The eventual result, Cemex spokespersons say, is a quicker payoff
of the synergies that helped drive the merger process in the first
place. Both the newly acquired company and Cemex as a whole improve in
efficiency and profitability. And that, in a nutshell, is the payoff of
global expansion.
So what might be next for Cemex? Well, India and China are sitting
there with a couple of billion people to serve. Cemex hasn't
indicated any plans for those two countries, but as Medina says:
"They're too big to ignore."
Kelly Arthur Garrett (kellyg@prodigy.net.mx) is a former U.S.
magazine executive editor who lives and writes in Mexico City.
COPYRIGHT 2005 American Chamber of Commerce of
Mexico A.C. Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.