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Ports of Auckland flags weak end to the year

Wednesday 4th April 2012

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Ports of Auckland flagged a likely weak result in the second half of the financial year after losing contracts because of its industrial dispute, following on from a flat first-half underlying profit, declared today.

The port made a net profit of $18.6 million in the six months ended Dec. 31, though $4.8 million of that was a tax gain that is unlikely to recur, the company said. Stripping out that gain, underlying profit was $13.8 million, down from a $14 million normalised profit a year earlier.

The port boosted revenue 9 percent to $96.6 million in the period, though operating costs climbed 12 percent. The board declared an interim dividend of $9.8 million, paid on Feb. 29, down from $10.4 million a year earlier.

“Second half results will be impacted by decreased container volume associated with recent industrial action and loss of the Maersk and Fonterra services,” chief executive Tony Gibson said in a statement. “It’s been a challenging period for the business.”

The port has been embroiled with a protracted dispute with the Maritime Union over its plan to introduce flexible shifts as a means to rein in its wage bill. That’s caused rolling strikes and lock-outs, and the parties have gone back to the bargaining table after Employment Court Judge Barry Travis granted an injunction and the port management drew back from hiring external stevedoring contractors.

Ports of Auckland lifted total container volume 0.2 percent to 454,234 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU), still more than rival Port of Tauranga’s 344,081 TEUs in the same period. Full import container volumes rose 1.7 percent to 169,557 TEUs. Tauranga’s import container volumes rose 15 percent to 54,982 TEUs in the same half.

Auckland’s trans-shipment volumes, where containers pass through the port before reaching their final destination, were down 6.3 percent from the same period a year earlier, while Port of Tauranga boosted pass-throughs by 40 percent in the same half.

Auckland’s bulk and breakback, or non-containerised, volumes rose 0.9 percent to 1.9 million tonnes.

The port said there were several one-off factors on the earnings period that probably won’t happen again, including a change in shipping schedules that lifted empty containers 20 percent, revenue from the Rena salvage, a record number of cruise ships for the Rugby World Cup, an increase in vehicle imports after Japan’s earthquake and new emissions standards, and prior period tax adjustments.

BusinessDesk.co.nz



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