Media release – August 15 2017
Ryman Healthcare ranked as one of the best in the world
Only Kiwi company recognised for top returns to shareholders
Ryman Healthcare has been ranked one of the top 10 best performing healthcare companies in the world for the fourth year
in a row by global management consulting firm, Boston Consulting Group (BCG).
Ryman was ranked eighth in the list of the world’s best performing healthcare companies, with an average annual total
shareholder return of 26.8 per cent over the past five years.
The BCG’s 2017 Value Creators Report rankings were compiled after researching shareholder returns at 2,350 global
companies across 32 sectors over the five years from 2012 to December 31, 2016. Ryman was the only New Zealand company
to make the list.
BCG has been tracking value creation among global large cap companies for 19 years and Ryman has been in its healthcare
top 10 since 2013.
Ryman Healthcare Chief Executive Gordon MacLeod said it was a tough list to make, and inclusion was a significant
achievement.
“We are delighted to be included because it is one of the most robust surveys of company performance in the world. To be
included on a list that includes the best performing companies around the globe is something to be proud of – and it
reflects a lot of hard work by many people over a number of years.’’
While there has been significant turnover in the list over this time, there is also an elite group of consistent
outperformers - companies that have delivered outstanding value creation over a sustained period.
“Ryman’s inclusion since 2013 shows that we have been performing at a consistently high level over a long period, and
that is no mean feat,’’ Gordon MacLeod said.
Ryman Healthcare’s long-term performance has been underpinned by strong growth in the company’s underlying earnings
which have averaged 16% per annum over the past 10 years and IFRS profits have grown by 20% per annum over the same
period.
Over this time, Ryman’s dividend has increased more than 16-fold from 1.04 cents per share to 17.8 cents per share. This
means an investor who purchased shares in Ryman Healthcare when the company first listed is now enjoying an annual yield
of more than 65% on their original purchase price.
The total shareholder return measure used by BCG is the most comprehensive metric for measuring a company’s shareholder
value creation performance and measures a combination of share price gains and dividend yield.
The length of analysis used by the authors of the report means it is in part capturing the long-term capital management
decisions made by management rather than simply short-term share price movements that may be driven by market sentiment
or news flow.
Gordon MacLeod said Ryman has always taken a long-term view and had reinvested more than $2.6 billion in its portfolio
since 1999 to fuel future growth.
“When we listed back in 1999 the intention was to build the company for the rapid growth in the population aged 75+ from
2018 onwards. Since then we’ve kept true to that vision, and we are now beginning to see the growth in the market we’ve
spent so long preparing for.’’
One of those long-term decisions was Ryman Healthcare’s entry into Victoria – which is larger than the New Zealand
market. Ryman opened its first village in Melbourne in 2014 and since then it has bought another five development sites
in Victoria.
In total Ryman has five villages under construction in New Zealand and Victoria and another 11 in the pipeline.
About Ryman Healthcare: Ryman was founded in 1984 and has become one of New Zealand’s largest listed companies. The company owns 31 villages
which are home to more than 10,000 residents in New Zealand and Australia. Each village offers a combination of
retirement living and aged care.