The Post

Covid-19 boosts profit

- Tom PullarStre­cker

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare – New Zealand’s most valuable firm – saw its market value jump to more than $19 billion on the NZX after posting a record profit on the back of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The company posted a 37 per cent rise in its annual profit to $287 million for the year to the end of March, with revenues from the sales of its breathing aids rising 18 per cent to $1.26b.

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare does not make mechanical ventilator­s with tubes that are inserted down patients’ throats, instead making a range of noninvasiv­e breathing aids and masks that are designed to be used in hospitals and at home.

Chief executive Lewis Gradon said nasal ‘‘high flow’’ therapy, and in particular Fisher & Paykel’s Optiflow system, had ‘‘steadily gained acceptance as the preferred frontline therapy for Covid-19 patients’’.

‘‘Demand for our hardware has pretty much followed Covid around the world,’’ he said.

‘‘It started in China, moved to Europe, moved to the US and now we are seeing more and more from other countries such as Brazil and Russia.’’

The company was already New Zealand’s most valuable firm, with a market value of just over $18b on the NZX, prior to its profit result on Monday.

Its share price rose 4.5 per cent to $33.45 within minutes of trading opening on the NZX yesterday, valuing the company at $19.2b. Its shares had eased back to $32.63 shortly before 11am, valuing the firm at $18.75b.

Sales of its breathing aids in the year to the end of March were boosted by the coronaviru­s pandemic, but the bigger impact may be in its new financial year, with the company forecastin­g another big jump in its sales and profits.

Gradon said it was already on track to deliver strong growth during the year to the end of March 2020, before the coronaviru­s ‘‘impacted sales’’.

‘‘Beginning in January, the demand for our respirator­y humidifier­s accelerate­d in a way that has been unpreceden­ted,’’ he said.

‘‘With new processes, new procedures and new ways of working safely, we managed to double, and in some instances triple, output for some of our hospital hardware products over just a few months at the end of the year,’’ he said.

Despite the intense demand for its products and ‘‘elevated’’ freight costs, Gradon said Fisher & Paykel Healthcare had not increased its prices. ‘‘We value a long-term relationsh­ip with our customers.

‘‘I’m incredibly proud of our people and their unyielding commitment to doing the right thing for patients,’’ he said.

The company’s future opportunit­y would be to ‘‘translate visible benefits of Optiflow therapy for Covid patients to respirator­y patients in general’’, and then to demonstrat­e how those benefits could be applied to patients in the home, he said.

The Auckland-based firm employs 5000 staff, mostly in New Zealand and in Mexico, where it has manufactur­ing plants. It has no connection any more with whiteware manufactur­er Fisher & Paykel Appliances, which is Chinese-owned.

Gradon said Fisher & Paykel Healthcare’s performanc­e in the year to March next year was hard to forecast. But the company has pencilled in a profit of $325m to $340m. That is based on an assumption that global hospitalis­ations caused by Covid-19 peak before the end of this month.

The company declared a final dividend of 15.5c a share, which took its annual distributi­on to 27.5c – up 18 per cent on last year.

 ??  ?? Fisher & Paykel Healthcare has seen demand for its products soar as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Fisher & Paykel Healthcare has seen demand for its products soar as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand