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New board member for USG
Written by Global Gypsum staff
27 September 2012
US: USG Corporation (USG) has announced the election of Matthew Carter Jr. to its board of directors. Carter will serve on the Audit and Governance committees of the USG board of directors. With his addition, USG's board now includes nine independent directors.
Carter is President, Sprint Global Wholesale & Emerging Solutions at Sprint Nextel Corporation. His leadership and experience spans more than 20 years across diverse industries with major companies such as Bristol Myers, Coca-Cola and Leap Wireless. Heavily involved in the telecommunications sector through his career, Carter holds a bachelor's degree from Northwestern University and a master of business administration from Harvard Business School.
"We are pleased to welcome Matt Carter to our board," said Jim Metcalf, chairman of the board, president and CEO of USG Corporation. "His history of leadership, vision, innovation and business transformation will be valuable assets as USG continues to create its own recovery and emerge as a stronger company."
US judge rules that Taishan must face US lawsuits
Written by Global Gypsum staff
13 September 2012
US: A US federal judge has ruled that Taishan Gypsum Co, a Chinese wallboard manufacturer, must face claims over its allegedly tainted product, which has been blamed for causing foul odours, the failure of appliances and health problems. The ruling means homeowners will be able to pursue claims against the Chinese firm in US courts, increasing the pressure for a settlement similar to that reached between plaintiffs and Knauf in 2011.
Judge Eldon Fallon of New Orleans denied motions by Taishan to dismiss four lawsuits filed by homeowners whose properties were allegedly affected by faulty drywall. Fallon also denied a request by Taishan to vacate a US$2.6m default judgment that he levied against the company in May 2010 after it had failed to make appearances in one of the cases. The ruling is the latest victory for plaintiffs in hundreds of drywall lawsuits that have been consolidated in the New Orleans federal court.
After Fallon entered the US$2.6m judgment against Taishan, the company's lawyers made appearances in the case and argued that the court lacked personal jurisdiction over the company because of its lack of contacts with the United States.
"We believe that the court was in error for all the reasons reflected in our papers and discussed at the hearing," said Joe Cyr, an attorney for Taishan.
Boral appoints Mike Kane as CEO
Written by Global Gypsum staff
10 September 2012
Australia: Australian buildings materials company Boral has appointed the head of its US division, Mike Kane, as its new chief executive officer following the departure of Mark Selway in May 2012. Kane will assume the post on 1 October 2012.
Kane joined the company in February 2010 and has executive experience at four other materials companies including US Gypsum, Hanson Building Materials, Johns-Manville and Holcim
"He has spent the past two and a half years significantly realigning the US business to the changed market conditions and positioning Boral to take full advantage of the US market recovery," said chairman Bob Every.
Kane said Boral has an increasingly significant position in the global building materials industry and said its Asian plasterboard unit provides a growth opportunity in that region.
Boral’s second half profit hit by slow housing market
Written by Global Gypsum staff
22 August 2012
Australia: Boral has reported a 59% fall in second-half profit, hit by weak housing construction in Australia and delays in big resource and road projects. Boral, which removed its chief executive in May 2012, declined to give a fiscal forecast for the year ahead in light of uncertain market conditions, but said it would update investors at its annual meeting in November 2012.
Boral's net profit for the six months to June 2012 fell to US$35.7m from US$87m a year earlier, as calculated from full year figures. The building products maker issued profit warnings in April 2012 and June 2012.
"Earnings from our Australian business in the six months to June were hit by very weak housing and non-residential building activity, combined with delays and disruption from sustained rainfall across the east coast. The positive impact of price increases was more than offset by much weaker sales volumes in these markets and by higher costs, including from the wet weather," said Boral's chief executive officer, Ross Batstone.
Overall for the year to 30 June 2012 profit, after tax dropped by 42% to US$106m from US$183m. Sales revenue grew by 5%, to US$5.24bn from US$4.94bn, but this excludes the impact of the acquisition of Lafarge's 50% of Boral's stake in their Asian plasterboard joint-venture.
Boral's Building Products division reported a 11% fall in revenue for wallboard, to US$368m from US$413m. Sales volumes declined year-on-year by 14%. Overall for the division earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) fell by 46% to US$74.2m from US$138m. The company attributed the decline to the fall in Australian housing which began in year to 30 June 2011 but fell rapidly again in the second half of the 2012 fiscal year, and wet weather. Price increases, which averaged around 2-3% were insufficient to offset the significant impact of lower volumes.
Plasterboard Asia reported a revenue of US$317m since 9 December 2011, when Boral acquired the rest of the joint-venture from Lafarge. Revenues in Indonesia, Thailand and South Korea grew whilst income was below expectations in China, due to a slow-down in construction activity there.
Wallboard capacity increased throughout the year in China with the acquisition of a 35MM2 plant in Shandong and on-going upgrade work increasing capacity from 13MM2 to 43MM2 in Chongqing. In Indonesia a 30MM2 capacity upgrade is currently scheduled in completion for early 2013 and in Vietnam, a 30MM2 upgrade in Ho Chi Minh City plant is progessing in line with expectations but with no given completion date.
For its 2013 outlook Boral expects continued weak housing demand, particularly for the first half of the 2013 fiscal year, to prove challenging for its Building Products division. It added that further interest rate reductions and/or improved consumer 'sentiment' are required for demand to lift in the six months ending June 2013. In Asia, continued growth in construction activity is expected together with more penetration by wallboard. While the residential market remains subdued in China, Boral's plant in Shandong will see growth of sales volumes in new high-end markets in Beijing, Tianjing and Shandong.
BNBM to spend US$39.3m on gypsum projects
Written by Global Gypsum staff
21 August 2012
China: Beijing New Building Materials has announced that its holding subsidiary Taishan Gypsum will spend more than US$39.3m building two gypsum wallboard plants and one cement retarder project using industrial by-product gypsum.
Taishan Gypsum will build one of its wallboard plants in the Shanghang Jiaoyang industrial park in Longyan City, Fujian Province. The project is estimated to cost roughly US$18.6m, of which US$5.6m will be raised by the company itself and US$13m from a bank loan.