Tuesday 24th February 2015 |
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PGG Wrightson, the rural services firm controlled by China's Agria Corp, beat expectations with a 47 percent gain in first half profit, driven by improvements in its retail, livestock and seed & grain units, and said annual earnings may rise as much as 16 percent.
Net profit rose to $19.7 million, or 2.6 cents per share, in the six months ended Dec. 31, from $13.4 million, or 1.6 cents a year earlier, the Christchurch based company said in a statement. Operating earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation climbed 51 percent to $33.6 million, and revenue from continuing operation increased 3.1 percent to $654.7 million. That beat Forsyth Barr's estimate for profit of $12.7 million and Ebitda of $25.5 million and First NZ Capital's forecast for profit of $13.4 million and Ebitda of $26 million.
"This is a particularly pleasing result for the first half, and whilst there are headwinds facing the agricultural sector such as falling milk prices and more recently a dry summer, we are cautiously optimistic about the remainder of the financial year," chief executive Mark Dewdney said. "The strength of this first half result has given us confidence that the 2015 full year result will be a solid one."
Wrightson forecast annual operating Ebitda to be in a range of $62 million and $68 million, having previously said it anticipated earnings to beat last year's $58.7 million.
The company beat its own guidance and analyst earnings in 2014 after its rural services and seeds and grains unit underpinned the increased earnings.
The board declared an interim dividend of 2 cents per share payable on April 8 with a March 12 record date.
The shares last traded at 51 cents, and have gained 11 percent this year. The stock is rated an average 'buy' based on three analyst recommendations compiled by Reuters, with a median price target of 51 cents.
The company's rural services unit, which includes it retail and livestock businesses, boosted external revenue 45 percent to $471 million, while Ebitda gained 15 percent to $33.5 million. Its seeds & grain unit reported a 12 percent decline in sales to $183.6 million, while earnings rose 34 percent $13.4 million.
Wrightson increased its debt by $30 million, buying 40 properties it had previously leased to reduce its lease expense. Net debt was $127.2 million as at Dec. 31, including $18.1 million of cash and equivalents. That increased the company's net debt to equity ratio to 49 percent from 33 percent six months earlier, and up from 37 percent on Dec. 31, 2013.
The company reported an operating cash outflow of $11.4 million in the period, compared to an inflow of $10.5 million a year earlier, with increased interest and income tax payments. A $49 million drawdown on bank borrowings increased cash held by $6.8 million in the half.
Agria first invested in Wrightson in 2009 when the company was forced to raise new equity to repay bank debt during the global financial crisis scuttled its bid to merge with Silver Fern Farms a year earlier.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
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