Fletcher Building posts 12% drop in FY earnings before $132 mln of charges
By Jonathan Underhill
Aug 22 (BusinessDesk) - Fletcher Building, New Zealand’s biggest construction and building products company, reported a
12 percent drop in annual earnings before one-time charges on sales growth fuelled by the first full-year contribution
from Australia’s Crane Group.
Earnings before one-time items fell to $317 million, or 46.5 cents a share, from $359 million, or 57.1 cents, a year
earlier, the Auckland-based company said in a statement. Sales rose 20 percent to $8.87 billion, with Crane providing
the single-biggest contribution. Analysts had forecast reported profit before one-time items of $315.5 million on sales
of $8.95 billion.
The second-biggest company on the NZX 50 Index has struggled with weaker building demand in New Zealand and Australia,
its biggest markets, while the much-touted fillip from rebuilding earthquake-damaged Christchurch has been delayed by
aftershocks and a slower-than-expected pace of insurance settlements.
“Weak building activity in New Zealand, coupled with a marked slowdown in residential and commercial construction in
Australia have resulted in lower earnings being achieved compared to last year,” outgoing chief executive Jonathan Ling
said.
He painted a lukewarm outlook for 2013, without giving any explicit forecasts.
“A significant increase in earnings from the current level would require a marked improvement in residential and
commercial construction levels, particularly in New Zealand and Australia,” he said.
New Zealand home building activity would see a modest improvement, though commercial construction wouldn’t pick up
materially. In Australia, there was a risk of further decline in home building and commercial work outside of mining
would “remain subdued”. Trading in North America would be “flat to slightly positive” and no recovery was seen in
Europe. China and Southeast Asia would experience growth.
Net profit in the latest year tumbled to $185 million from $283 million and included $132 million of charges to
restructure its Laminex business, close a Formica plant in Spain and write down the value of its Australian insulation
business after the government abandoned a subsidy scheme.
The shares last traded at $6.66 and have gained 7 percent this year. The stock is rated ‘outperform’ based on 11
recommendations compiled by Reuters, with a median price target of $7.15.
Fletcher will pay a final dividend of 17 cents a share on Oct. 17, making 34 cents for the year, up from 33 cents in
2011.
Revenue from Crane, the pipe-maker Fletcher acquired last year, was $2.39 billion in its first full year, from a
part-year contribution of $623 million in 2011. Crane earnings jumped to $106 million from $11 million on the same
basis. The results were driven by a 31 percent jump in earnings from pipelines after it won two coal-seam gas projects
in Queensland.
Building products posted an operating loss of $7 million, from a year-earlier profit of $31 million. Earnings fell
across the board for New Zealand plasterboard, insulation, roof tiles, sinkware and aluminium products. It took a $74
million charge against its Australian insulation business to write down goodwill, write off stock and cut the value of
its brands.
Earnings from concrete rose to $130 million from $125 million with New Zealand’s contribution unchanged at $56 million
and Australia’s pipeline and quarry businesses lifting earnings by $5 million to $74 million. Construction earnings
dropped 17 percent to $50 million while the backlog of construction work climbed to $1.09 billion at the end of June
from $764 million a year earlier.
Earnings at its Placemakers distribution chain fell 31 percent to $27 million while sales declined 5 percent to $813
million. Fletcher said the business maintained market share in the face of a low level of home building activity and as
competition eroded its gross margins.
Laminates and panels earnings tumbled 59 percent to $65 million and included $74 million of restructuring charges.
Revenue fell 4 percent.
Steel earnings fell 42 percent to $48 million. Market conditions in its long steel business “were extremely difficult,”
falling 58 percent while volumes were up 3 percent on the prior year.
Fletcher’s gearing at June 30 rose to 35.4 percent from 33.8 percent, which is below the company’s target range of 40
percent to 50 percent.
(BusinessDesk)