Markets
Key Facts
—The deal. Mexico’s Cemex is selling much of its Colombian business for about $555 million, in several transactions.
—The buyer. Swiss rival Holcim takes the biggest slice for $485 million, including the Caracolito cement plant and more than twenty other sites.
—The price. The combined sale values the assets at roughly ten times their 2025 earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation.
—The remainder. Cemex keeps two cement plants, at Maceo and Cúcuta, with combined capacity of about one and a half million tonnes a year.
—The timing. The Holcim deal is expected to close around the end of the year, subject to regulatory approval.
Two of the world’s biggest cement makers have just swapped ground in South America. The Cemex Colombia sale hands most of the Mexican giant’s business there to its Swiss rival Holcim, for around half a billion dollars.
For a foreign reader, this is a window into how the region’s homegrown multinationals now manage their sprawl. Cemex is one of the great Mexican multilatinas, built by expanding abroad, and it is now trimming rather than growing.
The company announced the move from its Monterrey headquarters, saying it would sell certain Colombian operations through several separate deals for a combined price of about five hundred fifty-five million dollars. That values the assets at roughly ten times last year’s core earnings.
What the Cemex Colombia sale actually involves
The centrepiece is a deal with Holcim, the Swiss building-materials group. According to Cemex’s own announcement, Holcim pays four hundred eighty-five million dollars for a cement plant, a grinding mill and more than twenty concrete and aggregates sites.
The rest is smaller and still in play. Cemex is negotiating with other buyers for remaining assets in the same region, a batch it expects to fetch a further seventy million dollars or so on top of the Holcim price.
Crucially, Cemex is not leaving Colombia altogether. It keeps two cement plants, at Maceo and Cúcuta, with combined annual capacity of about one and a half million tonnes, along with a grinding mill and some concrete and aggregates operations.
For Holcim the logic is expansion, not retreat. The Swiss group already runs a cement plant and a string of retail stores in Colombia, and the purchase adds more than twenty production sites with projected annual sales of around three hundred sixty million dollars.
Live Company IntelligenceCemex SAB de CV ADR — the full investor dossierInside: live share price, market cap, three-year financials, valuation, ESG and peer benchmarks — plus the latest Rio Times coverage.
Rio Times · Live Ticker Intelligence
Cemex SAB de CV ADR
CEMEX · Bolsa Mexicana de ValoresBasic MaterialsBuilding Materials
Share price · live
$21.44
▲ +0.33% today
Market cap
$17.7 bn
1.4 bn shares
P / E
35.1
EPS 0.35
Dividend yield
0.8%
The company
Employees
38,892
Headquarters
San Pedro Garza García
Listed since
1999
Website
CEMEX, S.A.B. de C.V., together with its subsidiaries, engages in the production, marketing, distribution, and sale of cement, ready-mix concrete, aggregates, urbanization solutions, and other construction materials and services worldwide. It offers gray ordinary portland, white portland, and blended cement products; masonry or mortar products; standard…
Financial performance · FY · USD
RevenueNet income
2023
$16.4 bn
$182.0 mn
2024
$16.1 bn
$939.0 mn
2025
$16.1 bn
$960.0 mn
Net income rose to $960.0 mn in 2025, from $182.0 mn in 2023.
Valuation & returns
EBITDA margin
18.3%
Net margin
2.7%
Return on equity
3.8%
Price / book
1.35
Enterprise value
$23.9 bn
Revenue growth · YoY
+11.2%
Latest earnings
Q1 2026 — reported EPS 0.17 vs 0.11 expected
Beat +55%
Peers & comparators
USD/MXN
▼ -0.04%
From The Rio Times
Latest coverage · 26 Jun 2026
Cemex Sells Most of Its Colombia Business and Heads North
Read →
Data: EODHD Fundamentals & live feed · The Rio Times Ticker Intelligence
Why a Mexican giant is selling and a Swiss one is buying
The two companies are reading the same market differently. Cemex has spent recent years cutting debt and sharpening its focus, selling non-core assets to fund investment where it sees stronger long-term returns.
Holcim, by contrast, is in growth mode in Latin America under a strategy it markets as building out attractive markets. Buying an established Colombian footprint in one move is faster than building it plant by plant.
For investors and residents, the deal is a quiet marker of how the cement map is being redrawn. Ownership of the plants that supply Colombia’s construction boom is shifting from a Mexican hand to a Swiss one, without a single new factory being built.
The wider backdrop is a construction market that is far from booming. Colombia’s economy has grown only modestly, high interest rates have held back building, and a cement business here is a bet on recovery rather than on today’s demand.
That helps explain the price. Ten times core earnings is a full valuation for a slow market, a sign that Holcim is paying for position and scale rather than for a market that is surging right now.
For Cemex, the cash matters more than the flags on a map. Freeing up several hundred million dollars lets it keep paying down debt and direct capital toward markets where it believes the returns will be higher over the coming decade.
What does the Cemex Colombia sale include?
Cemex is selling much of its Colombian business for about five hundred fifty-five million dollars across several deals. The largest, with Holcim, covers a cement plant, a grinding mill and more than twenty concrete and aggregates sites for four hundred eighty-five million dollars.
Is Cemex leaving Colombia entirely?
Cemex is not leaving entirely, keeping two cement plants, at Maceo and Cúcuta, with combined capacity of about one and a half million tonnes a year, plus a grinding mill and other operations. It is trimming its footprint rather than exiting the country.
Why does this matter?
The deal shows a Mexican multinational streamlining while a Swiss rival expands, reshaping who supplies Colombia’s construction market. It is a clear example of how global building-materials firms are trading positions across Latin America.
View original source — Rio Times ↗

