×

Cement maker Cemex’s quarter earnings rise on cost cuts, higher prices

By Thomson Reuters Feb 5, 2026 | 5:19 AM

By Kylie Madry

MEXICO CITY, Feb 5 (Reuters) – Mexican cement maker Cemex reported on Thursday a 16% climb in fourth-quarter core earnings, supported by cost-cutting measures and higher product ‍prices, though results fell short of analysts’ estimates.

The firm’s core earnings, or earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA), rose to $781 million, landing below the estimate of $795 million from analysts polled by LSEG.

Cemex said both operating expenses and cost of sales fell year-on-year, reflecting CEO ‌Jaime Muguiro’s strategy to focus on core businesses ‌and return capital to shareholders.

Looking ahead, the company expects EBITDA to achieve high single-digit growth in 2026, following a 0.72% increase in 2025.

It also expects maintenance capital expenditure to total about $900 million in 2026, ​while earmarking roughly $510 million for growth investments.

The company’s board proposed a dividend 40% higher than the $130 million payout from last ‍year, and announced a $500-million share buyback ​programme over the next three years.

As part of ​the restructuring plan, Cemex reduced its workforce by 10% in the ‍fourth quarter compared with the year-ago period.

These layoffs were accompanied by $48 million in severance costs, as well as charges related to the sale of Cemex’s Panama unit and write-downs of certain past acquisitions and assets.

These factors pushed Cemex into a net ‍loss for the quarter, reversing gains from the same period last year and falling short of analysts’ estimates of a $246.67 million net profit, ‍according to LSEG-compiled ‍data.

Despite the one-off charges, quarterly sales rose 11% ​to $4.18 billion, exceeding estimates, with Cemex attributing ​the increase ⁠to stronger performance in Mexico and the ‌Europe, Middle East, and Africa region.

Cemex has sought to shed non-core assets and focus more on its aggregates business in the United States, with executives flagging more divestitures in the works in recent quarters.

(Reporting by Kylie Madry; additional reporting by Michael Susin and Tomás Cobos; Editing ⁠by Sherry Jacob-Phillips)