CEMEX, S.A.B. de C.V.

NYSE:CX Voorraadrapport

Marktkapitalisatie: US$18.3b

CEMEX. de Inkomsten in het verleden

Verleden criteriumcontroles 1/6

CEMEX. de heeft de winst zien groeien met een gemiddeld jaarlijks percentage van 23.7%, terwijl de Basic Materials-industrie de winst zag groeien met 13.7% per jaar. De inkomsten zijn gegroeid met een gemiddeld jaarlijks percentage van 3.2%. Het rendement op eigen vermogen van CEMEX. de is 3.8%, en het heeft een nettomarge van 3%.

Belangrijke informatie

23.74%

Groei van de winst

19.65%

Groei van de winst per aandeel

Basic Materials Groei van de industrie19.98%
Inkomstengroei3.24%
Rendement op eigen vermogen3.80%
Nettomarge3.04%
Volgende winstupdate23 Jul 2026

Recente prestatie-updates uit het verleden

Recent updates

Seeking Alpha Jan 08

CEMEX: Improvement Is Evident, But More Is Needed To Expand The Multiple

Summary CEMEX has significantly improved margins, divested weaker assets, and achieved investment-grade debt, outperforming peers despite industry headwinds. Operational improvements have come despite a challenging market backdrop in both the U.S. and Mexico; demand recoveries could drive more margin leverage in 2026-2028. CX's management is targeting $400M in cost savings by 2027 through increased operational efficiency and is also looking at additional asset disposals and more efficient capex spending. M&A further into the aggregates space makes sense given higher margins and lower capex requirements; improving FCF conversion is a key potential value driver. A 7x EBITDA multiple supports a mid-$12 fair value today, but further rerating is possible if CX achieves further margin and FCF improvements. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Feb 07

CEMEX Valuation Is Fair, But Not Tactically Attractive Going Into A Down Cycle

Summary CEMEX, S.A.B. de C.V.'s Q4 2024 results show declining sales in key markets, indicating a potential cyclical downturn and a challenging future for maintaining high margins and revenue growth. Despite offsetting lower volumes with higher prices, Cemex's operating margins are declining due to high overhead costs and competitive pressures. Valuation remains fair but not opportunistic; potential market challenges in FY25 and FY26 could present better buying opportunities for CX stock. Focus on US growth CAPEX and M&A, with the potential for increased dividends or buybacks if CAPEX decreases. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Oct 28

After Q3 Results, CEMEX Approaches Cyclical Bottoms, But Is Only Fairly Valued

Summary CEMEX, S.A.B. de C.V. posted Q3 results with a 9% stock drop, citing non-recurring volume decreases due to challenging climate conditions but maintained EBITDA margins through pricing. Cemex operates globally with 90 million tons capacity, focusing on North America and the EU, and is divesting non-core assets to consolidate operations. The company has manageable but high leverage, with debt costs exceeding asset returns, and relies on government-driven infrastructure spending for future growth. Valued at a 12% yield on cycle-average earnings, CEMEX is a Hold at current prices, with potential interest at lower valuations. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Sep 30

CEMEX: Patience Should Pay Off, As Multiple And Growth Prospects Remain Favorable

Summary CEMEX's Mexican segment shows steady growth, offsetting weaknesses in Europe and the Middle East, leading to flat to slightly positive growth in 2024. Strong pricing and decelerating cost inflation are expected to support margins, with volume growth in the U.S. and Mexico driving top line growth. Despite recent stock decline due to FX headwinds, the stock is attractively priced with promising long-term prospects from onshoring and federal funding. I maintain a BUY rating on CX stock, anticipating margin growth and improved valuation, driven by strong pricing and strategic acquisitions. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Jul 09

Cemex: Positive Drivers Undermined By Worries Around Mexico And Capital Allocation

Summary Cemex stock has underperformed peers, in large part due to bearish sentiment on Mexico after the recent presidential election. Demand and margins have stayed healthy in Mexico, and Q2 should see double-digit growth again, but guidance for the second half is a big watch item. U.S. results have been less impressive, with Cemex seeing headwinds from weather, weaker residential and non-residential demand, and higher transportation costs, but the longer-term supply/demand outlook is favorable. Capital management concerns persist as Cemex looks to grow U.S. business through M&A and brownfield expansion, while also balancing debt reduction and shareholder returns. Trading below $7 to $8, and with bullish long-term fundamentals for cement still in place, Cemex continues to look undervalued. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Feb 13

CEMEX: Volume Recovery And Strong Pricing To Drive Growth In 2024

Summary Cemex is experiencing strong volume recovery in its Mexican business across most of its products. The company's margin profile has improved significantly, supported by the strong performance of its Urbanization Solutions business and pricing strategies. Cemex's stock is trading at an attractive price point, offering a significant discount compared to its historical average and the sector median. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Nov 26

Cemex: 4 Reasons Why Historical Underperformance Is Set To Continue

Summary Cemex (CX) has significantly underperformed global equity indexes over the past 10 years. The company operates in a highly competitive industry which makes it hard to generate high profit margins and attractive returns on capital. CX is focused on improving its balance sheet but the company remains highly levered and is exposed to significant risks in the event of economic weakness. CX trades at a below market valuation but this is warranted due to significant historical earnings volatility. I am initiating CX with a sell rating. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Sep 12

Cemex: Great Potential But Poor Finances

Summary Strong demographics and rising middle class in LATAM, aging homes, and overdue infrastructure renewal in the USA are driving forces behind the growing demand for new construction. Cemex is a cement producer perfectly positioned to benefit from those dynamics. More than 50 % of its revenue originates from the US and Mexico. The company has performed well in the last few quarters with rising revenue and profit margins. However, its liquidity is far from adequate. I give a hold rating because I believe Cemex has insufficient liquidity despite the company`s potential. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha May 28

CEMEX: An Undervalued Leader In Sustainable Cement

Summary CEMEX is taking proactive steps to address climate change—a must for any cement manufacturer. CEMEX has a strong balance sheet, generates consistent EBITDA and cash flow, and is building equity. A discounted free cash flow model indicates CX stock is undervalued, and results are only mildly sensitive to demand. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Feb 13

Cemex GAAP EPADS of -$0.12, revenue of $3.87B

Cemex press release (NYSE:CX): Q4 GAAP EPADS of -$0.12. Revenue of $3.87B (+8.4% Y/Y). Operating EBITDA in the fourth quarter of 2022 reached US$630 million, decreasing 1% on a like-to-like basis. EBITDA was higher in in three of our four regions, with the US and Europe growing double digit and high single digit, respectively. Operating EBITDA margin decreased by 1.7pp from 18.0% in the fourth quarter of 2021 to 16.3% this quarter. While EBITDA margin declined, the contraction was the lowest of the year, Shares -0.19% PM.
Seeking Alpha Dec 13

High Costs And Macro Worries Drag Cemex Down

Summary Cemex has underperformed, with investors fretting about both a weaker demand environment in 2023 and underwhelming profitability at this global cement giant. Management continues to talk a lot about environmental/sustainability and growth initiatives, but I want to hear what they intend to do about underwhelming cost/profitability that increasingly seems structural and long-standing. Next year is likely to see U.S. volumes contract on weaker housing and non-residential, but the long-term combination of housing, non-residential, and infrastructure demand and limited new supply is bullish. Underwhelming profitability remains a key risk, but even with more conservative assumptions, Cemex shares appear undervalued. My bullish call on Cemex (CX) in February was predicated on strong volumes and pricing in the U.S. driving better profits and cash flow, with a healthy outlook for increasing infrastructure spending supporting the longer-term view. While U.S. demand and pricing have both been healthy, the market has become considerably more nervous about 2023 and Cemex has fallen short on profitability, leading to a 20% drop in the stock price and underperformance in an admittedly lackluster cement sector (though Eagle (EXP), GCC, and Martin Marietta (MLM) have held up better). I’m increasingly concerned about what look like structural cost issues at Cemex that seem likely to lead to longer-term underperformance in profitability. That said, I do think infrastructure demand is likely to remain quite supportive and today’s price seems to reflect an overly bearish outlook for the company. Management has most definitely not earned the benefit of the doubt here, but if the company can manage something on the order of 4% long-term EBITDA growth, I do think there is some value here. The U.S. Market Will Get Tougher, But Cemex Should Be Relatively Better Off U.S. demand/consumption of cement has definitely slowed in the second half of the year, and next year is likely to be even more challenging. With U.S. housing likely to decline around 10% or so, I believe U.S. cement volumes could contract by around 4% in 2023. And if the economy sees an even harder landing in the wake of significant rate hikes, there could yet be downside risk to that range due to even weaker non-residential building activity (I’m relatively bearish on non-resi compared to the Street). Offsetting that, at least to some degree, is a healthier outlook for infrastructure projects. Federal infrastructure stimulus should start kicking in more meaningfully in 2023 (and in subsequent years), and high single-digit growth in infrastructure demand (roads, etc.) should help mitigate the weaker demand from housing and non-residential construction. I’d also note that while I expect housing to be weak in 2023, there is still a meaningful shortage of housing and I expect good long-term growth in housing (particularly non-residential). Cemex could also see some relative benefits from its footprint. Housing declines aren’t likely to be equal across the country, and I expect relatively stronger housing markets across the Southern U.S., where Cemex’s operations are concentrated (California, Arizona, Texas, and Florida are major Cemex markets, as well as North Carolina to a lesser degree). I also see relatively stronger non-residential and infrastructure activity in these markets, so it is plausible to me that Cemex could outperform overall reported volumes in the U.S. in 2023 and beyond. Mexico has had a rougher year than the U.S. in 2022, with volumes trending down around 5% so far and likely to end the year down around 7% to 8%. Higher rates have hurt informal housing demand and Cemex has lost some share due to aggressive pricing. On a more positive note, headwinds tied to the pandemic/pandemic recovery shouldn’t be an issue in 2023 and while the country is vulnerable to a U.S. recession, nearshoring has been driving more demand from commercial and industrial customers. I’d also note that the proposed federal budget for Mexico in 2023 is the largest it's been in a decade, with infrastructure projects like Riviera Maya helping to drive demand for cement and other materials. Management Needs To Address Costs More Meaningfully Cemex’s November Investor Day had a lot of content regarding sustainability and growth initiatives. That’s fine to a point, and both are important. I applaud Cemex’s aggressive environmental/sustainability targets, including a significant reduction in CO2 from cement production (with the company targeting a roughly 30% reduction by 2030). Likewise, I’m bullish on the company’s Vertua product line (a more environmentally friendly product line that already accounts for about 33%-40% of ready-mix and cement volumes) and Regenera efforts (harnessing industrial and municipal waste). I also support the company’s plans to use organic capacity additions and bolt-on acquisitions to increase its production base in Mexico, the U.S., and EU and drive higher sustainable potential EBITDA. What I would have liked to hear more about, though, is the company’s cost structure. Cemex has been aggressive all year on pricing, but it hasn’t been enough to preserve margins, with EBITDA margin down 320bp to 16.4% in the last quarter. Cemex isn’t alone, as many companies are struggling to offset inflationary cost pressures, but this isn’t a new issue. Cemex’s EBITDA/ton in the U.S. market is about $10 to $20 below average and more than $60/ton below the sector leaders (at around $20-$30 for Cemex and $80+ for the leaders). This isn’t a new phenomenon, and inflationary cost pressures have made it worse. I don’t have the detailed information it would take to know exactly what Cemex is doing differently (worse), but it seems as though Cemex’s energy and maintenance costs are both meaningful contributors. This may speak to an overaged asset base and/or the challenges of operating near capacity (Cemex has had to import from Mexico, where its cash production costs are even higher), but whatever the cause, I’m disappointed that this isn’t a front-and-center part of management’s plans to drive better performance. Looking at Street estimates for 2022-2024, Cemex is expected to generate EBITDA margins of 17.5%, 17.7%, and 18.5%. By comparison, expectations are for GCC to generate margins of 31%, 31.9%, and 31.9%, while Cementos Argos is expected to improve from 17.9% to 18.2% to 18.9%. Martin Marietta is expected to improve from around 26.5% to 29%, while Eagle should stay in the 33%-34% range. Even allowing for issues of comparability (this isn’t “apples to apples”), Cemex stands out and I think this is something management needs to start addressing more forcefully. The Outlook I’m still looking for over 4% long-term revenue growth from Cemex, as I believe the company remains well-leveraged to what is likely to be a period of sustained above-average cement demand growth in the U.S. and relatively healthy demand in Mexico as well (driven largely by reshoring and infrastructure spending). I’m clearly not as bullish on margins as before, though I do think EBITDA margin should get into the 19%s over time. That, in turn, should allow for free cash flow margins in the 6%s and healthy long-term free cash flow growth. The near-term priority for cash will be improving the company’s leverage position and credit rating, followed by growth projects and then returns of capital to shareholders (management has committed to growth projects irrespective of achieving an investment grade rating, but has said capital returns are dependent upon achieving an IG rating). Discounting those cash flows back, I do still think the shares are meaningfully undervalued today. Likewise, using my weighted EV/EBITDA approach (using a 5.5x multiple on 12-month EBITDA and 6x on long-term full-cycle EBITDA), I get a fair value close to $6. Cemex has traded at higher multiples in the past, but given the shortfalls in profitability in the U.S., management’s growth plans, and the elevated leverage, I’m more comfortable with discounted multiples.
Seeking Alpha Oct 26

Cemex Q3 2022 Earnings Preview

Cemex (NYSE:CX) is scheduled to announce Q3 earnings results on Thursday, October 27th, before market open. The consensus EPS Estimate is $0.21 (+187.5% Y/Y) and the consensus Revenue Estimate is $4.07B (+8.0% Y/Y). Over the last 1 year, CX has beaten EPS estimates 50% of the time and has beaten revenue estimates 75% of the time. Over the last 3 months, EPS estimates have seen 1 upward revision and 0 downward. Revenue estimates have seen 4 upward revisions and 0 downward.
Seeking Alpha Sep 30

Cemex: Pricing Initiatives Support Earnings Momentum

Summary Cemex has posted solid growth and resilient earnings despite the more challenging macro environment. Higher pricing across all operating regions is balancing softer volume trends in cement sales. We are bullish on the stock following the deep selloff, with a sense that positive fundamentals support a positive long-term outlook. Cemex, S.A.B. de C.V. (CX) is one of the world's largest cement producers with operations in more than 90 countries. Following a historically strong 2021, recovering from pandemic disruptions, the story this year has been new macro headwinds amid rising cost pressures and global growth concerns. Indeed, shares of CX are off more than 50% in 2022, reflecting broader pessimism toward trends in construction activity and broader industrial production. With the stock trading near a 2-year low, we highlight what remains a high-quality industry leader with overall solid fundamentals. Despite more challenging operating conditions, Cemex is supported by recurring profitability and a strong balance sheet. We are bullish on CX, which is well positioned to rebound into a positive long-term outlook with ongoing earnings momentum. CX Key Metrics The company last reported its Q2 results in late August with EPADS "earnings per American depositary shares" at $0.18, which beat the consensus by $0.04. Revenue of $4.1 billion climbed by 11% year-over-year and was also ahead of estimates. Management noted sales growth in all regions, still capturing momentum from strong demand at the end of 2021. While the company is based in Mexico, the U.S. is its largest operating region representing approximately 30% of sales, which impressively climbed by 15% y/y. Company IR The top line momentum was driven by higher average pricing which climbed by double digits globally across the three product segments including aggregates, ready-mix, and cement. The effort helped balance mixed volume metrics between a 1% increase in aggregates and a 4% higher ready-mix volume against a 7% decline in cement sold. On the other hand, inflationary cost pressures based on higher energy prices and the impact on freight and logistics hit the gross margin to 31.2% from 33.6% in the period last year. The result is that EBITDA at $723 million was down 8% y/y which also flowed into weaker free cash flow generation. Company IR Cemex ended the quarter with $490 million in cash against $8.7 billion in total debt. Considering the Q2 annualized EBITDA run rate approaching $2.9 billion, the net debt to EBITDA leverage ratio at 2.8x has declined in recent years. Notably, an important development during Q2 was a credit rating upgrade from "Fitch" which moved Cemex's debt to 'BB+' from the prior 'BB' rating. The credit opinion cited the otherwise stable leverage ratio while recognizing the company's strong industry position globally. We agree with this assessment. In terms of forward guidance, Cemex management expects full-year 2022 operating EBITDA growth in the low to mid-single-digits compared to 2021. The expectation for volumes by product echoes the trends from Q2 with stronger ready-mix and aggregates growth, both with low to mid-single-digit increases, balancing flat sales in cement compared to last year. The impact of energy costs remains a key point of uncertainty as it relates to margins. Company IR CX Stock Price Forecast It's fair to say that the sentiment surrounding Cemex is terrible, given its position within building materials and the connection to residential and commercial construction. All indications are that global growth is under pressure, which hits Cemex from all sides. Its key operating regions like North America including the U.S. and Mexico along with Europe are dealing with record inflation and rising interest rates with limited visibility for a quick turnaround. When looking at the stock, the big question becomes how much of these headwinds have already been priced in, with shares under $4.00 back to a pre-pandemic level from 2019. In our view, there is a case to be made that its fundamental strengths can limit the downside in the stock from the current level. Seeking Alpha We talked about the solid balance sheet and the underlying level of profitability. The other dynamic to consider is that the company's size becomes an advantage in dealing with costs while also providing some flexibility to move pricing higher. In other words, even if volumes are softer, Cemex has room to push pricing in support of its financials. As inflationary pressures ease going forward, margins can get a lift which provides some confidence that earnings targets are achievable. Company IR According to consensus, the market is forecasting 2022 EPS of $0.59, up 14% over 2021, which can trend higher in 2023 towards $0.63 and $0.72 in 2024. This would be on top of steady top-line growth even under flat volumes from current levels. The bullish case for the stock is simply that Cemex ultimately outperforms these low expectations, possibly in a scenario where macro conditions evolve more favorably.
Seeking Alpha Jul 27

Cemex Q2 2022 Earnings Preview

Cemex (NYSE:CX) is scheduled to announce Q2 earnings results on Thursday, July 28th, before market open. The consensus EPS Estimate is $0.15 and the consensus Revenue Estimate is $4.06B (+5.3% Y/Y). Over the last 3 months, EPS estimates have seen 1 upward revision and 1 downward. Revenue estimates have seen 2 upward revisions and 1 downward.
Seeking Alpha Feb 23

Cemex Remains Set For Better Results, Even With Higher Costs Taking A Bite

Cemex's fourth quarter results came up short, with costs taking a bigger bite as pricing actions lagged rising energy costs. Demand in the U.S. remains strong, with limited incremental supply, and Europe's demand/supply balance is improving more than the market seems to recognize. Softer demand in Mexico is a threat in 2022, as is the risk of even more intense cost pressure. Cemex isn't getting credit for the improvements to the business and the healthy demand outlook for the next three-plus years, and these shares are worth a closer look.
Seeking Alpha Sep 08

Cemex Looking At A Pretty Attractive Setup While Investors Seem Worried About The Cycle

Cemex has been posting better results, and the pricing outlook for the U.S. is strong as major markets are effectively sold out ahead of improving non-residential and infrastructure project activity. The outlook for Mexico and Latin America is also improving, with healthy private construction activity in Mexico, improving construction activity elsewhere in Latin America, and future government projects in Mexico. Hitting management's ESG/carbon emissions goals will be challenging, but management is taking a multi-faceted approach. Mid-single-digit revenue growth and double-digit growth in EBITDA and FCF can support a fair value above $10 today, but the Street seems concerned about signs of a near-term peak in non-resi activity.

Opbrengsten en kosten

Hoe CEMEX. de geld verdient en uitgeeft. Gebaseerd op laatst gerapporteerde winst, op LTM-basis.


Inkomsten en omzetgeschiedenis

NYSE:CX Opbrengsten, kosten en inkomsten (USD Millions )
DatumInkomstenInkomstenG+A UitgavenR&D-uitgaven
31 Mar 2616,5375033,4850
31 Dec 2516,1323943,4510
30 Sep 2515,6989233,3800
30 Jun 2515,5079053,4070
31 Mar 2515,7357873,4410
31 Dec 2416,0639033,5140
30 Sep 2416,3092173,6560
30 Jun 2416,6171173,6830
31 Mar 2416,5491133,6330
31 Dec 2316,4041043,5360
30 Sep 2316,3963793,4400
30 Jun 2315,9885253,3490
31 Mar 2315,8005703,2980
31 Dec 2214,7063753,0690
30 Sep 2215,2819453,0820
30 Jun 2215,0193482,9840
31 Mar 2214,7303502,9120
31 Dec 2114,3797922,8720
30 Sep 2114,2176192,8880
30 Jun 2113,948-5012,8670
31 Mar 2113,112-7522,7630
31 Dec 2012,669-1,3672,7460
30 Sep 2012,661-1,5842,8720
30 Jun 2012,614222,9120
31 Mar 2013,112933,0350
31 Dec 1912,959452,9070
30 Sep 1912,7951342,9340
30 Jun 1913,0541262,9600
31 Mar 1913,3214052,9790
31 Dec 1813,5314543,0190
30 Sep 1814,1034233,1360
30 Jun 1813,5375553,0120
31 Mar 1814,0444753,1210
01 Jan 1812,9265752,8670
30 Sep 1714,0449863,0860
30 Jun 1714,2209903,1090
31 Mar 1713,7098742,9950
31 Dec 1612,0356482,6380
30 Sep 1612,3255512,7060
30 Jun 1612,6652512,8020
31 Mar 1613,1481722,9060
31 Dec 1512,729182,8190
30 Sep 1513,015-2282,8140
30 Jun 1513,575-2942,9400

Kwaliteitswinsten: CX heeft een grote eenmalige verlies van $825.8M wat gevolgen heeft voor de financiële resultaten van de laatste 12 maanden tot 31st March, 2026.

Groeiende winstmarge: De huidige netto winstmarges (3%) CX } zijn lager dan vorig jaar (5%).


Analyse vrije kasstroom versus winst


Analyse van de winstgroei in het verleden

Winsttrend: CX is de afgelopen 5 jaar winstgevend geworden en heeft de winst met 23.7% per jaar laten groeien.

Versnelling van de groei: De winstgroei CX is het afgelopen jaar negatief geweest en kan daarom niet worden vergeleken met het 5-jarig gemiddelde.

Winst versus industrie: CX had het afgelopen jaar een negatieve winstgroei ( -36.1% ), waardoor het moeilijk is om te vergelijken met het branchegemiddelde Basic Materials ( 9.7% ).


Rendement op eigen vermogen

Hoge ROE: Het Rendement op eigen vermogen ( 3.8% ) van CX wordt als laag beschouwd.


Rendement op activa


Rendement op geïnvesteerd vermogen


Ontdek sterk presterende bedrijven uit het verleden

Bedrijfsanalyse en status van financiële gegevens

GegevensLaatst bijgewerkt (UTC-tijd)
Bedrijfsanalyse2026/05/18 23:08
Aandelenkoers aan het einde van de dag2026/05/18 00:00
Inkomsten2026/03/31
Jaarlijkse inkomsten2025/12/31

Gegevensbronnen

De gegevens die gebruikt zijn in onze bedrijfsanalyse zijn afkomstig van S&P Global Market Intelligence LLC. De volgende gegevens worden gebruikt in ons analysemodel om dit rapport te genereren. De gegevens zijn genormaliseerd, waardoor er een vertraging kan optreden voordat de bron beschikbaar is.

PakketGegevensTijdframeVoorbeeld Amerikaanse bron *
Financiële gegevens bedrijf10 jaar
  • Resultatenrekening
  • Kasstroomoverzicht
  • Balans
Consensus schattingen analisten+3 jaar
  • Financiële prognoses
  • Koersdoelen analisten
Marktprijzen30 jaar
  • Aandelenprijzen
  • Dividenden, splitsingen en acties
Eigendom10 jaar
  • Top aandeelhouders
  • Handel met voorkennis
Beheer10 jaar
  • Leiderschapsteam
  • Raad van bestuur
Belangrijkste ontwikkelingen10 jaar
  • Bedrijfsaankondigingen

* Voorbeeld voor effecten uit de VS, voor niet-Amerikaanse effecten worden gelijkwaardige formulieren en bronnen gebruikt.

Tenzij anders vermeld zijn alle financiële gegevens gebaseerd op een jaarperiode, maar worden ze elk kwartaal bijgewerkt. Dit staat bekend als Trailing Twelve Month (TTM) of Last Twelve Month (LTM) gegevens. Meer informatie.

Analysemodel en Snowflake

Details van het analysemodel dat is gebruikt om dit rapport te genereren zijn beschikbaar op onze Github-pagina. We hebben ook handleidingen over hoe je onze rapporten kunt gebruiken en tutorials op YouTube.

Leer meer over het team van wereldklasse dat het Simply Wall St-analysemodel heeft ontworpen en gebouwd.

Industrie en sector

Onze industrie- en sectormetrics worden elke 6 uur berekend door Simply Wall St, details van ons proces zijn beschikbaar op Github.

Bronnen van analisten

CEMEX, S.A.B. de C.V. wordt gevolgd door 28 analisten. 14 van deze analisten hebben de schattingen van de omzet of winst ingediend die zijn gebruikt als input voor ons rapport. Inzendingen van analisten worden de hele dag door bijgewerkt.

AnalistInstelling
Benjamin TheurerBarclays
Benjamin TheurerBarclays
Harry GoadBerenberg