Otago Daily Times

Agedcare operator Arvida doubles profit, optimistic for future

- NIKKI MANDOW

AUCKLAND: Retirement village and agedcare operator Arvida Group saw strong growth in the six months to September 30 on the back of high occupancy and contributi­ons from last year’s acquisitio­ns.

The retirement village and agedcare company predicts even better financial performanc­e for the full year, as more people move through its expanded operations.

Net profit for the half year rose 110% on first half 2018, to $30.5 million, and underlying profit rose 45% to $17.9 million.

Arvida chief executive Bill McDonald said occupancy of its higherdepe­ndency care facilities was 95.3% in September, ‘‘significan­tly higher than industry experience.

‘‘Growth in bed numbers, premium fee revenue and high care occupancy underpin a strong recurring cash flow profile,’’ he said.

Meanwhile, the strong property market over the last few years helped lift Arvida’s resale gains — the difference between the price a unit was initially bought for and what it was sold for during the financial period — by 75%, and resale margins rose to 22%.

Arvida — a play on words mixing ‘‘Arv’’ as in ‘‘A retirement village’’ and ‘‘vida’’, the Spanish word for life — listed on the New Zealand stock exchange in 2014. That followed what Mr McDonald described at the time as an intense period of merger and acquisitio­n activity to get 17 villages scattered throughout New Zealand into one entity and ready for an initial public offering.

The float raised $80 million, with two of the first investors being then All Blacks Richie McCaw and Dan Carter.

At the time of the float, Arvida had 952 agedcare beds and 812 retirement units, providing accommodat­ion for more than 1700 residents. It bought three more villages in 2015.

More acquisitio­ns have seen the group expand to 29 retirement villages with over 4000 residents.

Mr McDonald told BusinessDe­sk that while the ongoing growth strategy includes acquisitio­n, the company will also look more at building new villages, and expanding its existing ones.

‘‘We are on track to deliver 112 new homes this financial year, in line with guidance provided. This will be a significan­t milestone for the group as the developmen­ts reflect the completion of the first of our major apartment projects since listing four years ago.’’

In August, Arvida announced the purchase of 18ha of bare land in Kerikeri for a new retirement village involving 200 independen­tliving villas and an 80bed care facility. Mr McDonald said the first new homes at the company’s other greenfield developmen­t in Tasman should be finished next year.

‘‘With acquisitio­n of the Kerikeri site, our future annual build rate increased to over 200 new homes from 2021,’’ Mr McDonald said.

‘‘The future developmen­t pipeline includes 1385 units and beds to be built over the next 57 years.’’

Mr McDonald said new villages would be more ‘‘outwardfac­ing’’, meaning there would be a focus on involving the community in the life of the village, whether it be through a cafe, recreation­al facilities like pool or a gym, or even a creche.

Arvida announced a September quarter dividend of 1.3 cents per share to be paid on December 20.

The shares yesterday closed up 1c at $1.31 and have gained about 8.5% in the past 12 months. — BusinessDe­sk

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