Manila Bulletin

D&L sees market starting to recover

- By JAMES A. LOYOLA

D&L Industries, Inc., the country’s largest specialty foods ingredient­s, plastics and oleochemic­als firm, is spending more on capital expenditur­es to ramp up its expansion project as it sees recovery in the market and a better performanc­e in 2020.

The firm has so far spent ₱1.4 billion from capital expenditur­es in the first nine months of 2019, triple the ₱456 million spent in the same period last year and it expects to spend about ₱2 billion by the end of the year, mainly for its Batangas expansion.

In a press briefing, D&L President Alvin Lao said “we believe that we are at the bottom of the cycle in terms of net income decline… We’re already seeing signs of our business picking up, especially in the food segment where margins and sales mix are continuing to improve.”

“Our expanded production capacity planned for 2021, with its improved capabiliti­es, will place us in a strong position to increase our value to customers and further expand our export business,” he added.

Lao said their domestic business is seen to start recovering in the fourth quarter although exports may not bounce back as fast.

He said this optimism is due to the continued easing in inflation, the boost in the economy due to lower interest rates and reserve requiremen­ts, and the reduction in port congestion.

Also seen to improve their business is the ramping up of government spending, the generally low oil prices and the likely passage of the Corporate Income Tax and Incentive Rationaliz­ation Act (CITIRA) bill in the next few months which will address uncertaint­ies faced by D&L’s customers.

Lao noted that, “2019 will mark the first year, since the IPO, in which D&L may post a decline in full-year net income.”

D&L reported that its recurring income reached ₱2.0 billion in the first nine months of 2019, 15 percent lower than last year. In the third quarter alone, net income fell 29 percent to ₱617 million.

Sales dropped 18 percent to ₱16.56 billion in the first nine months of 2019 from ₱20.17 billion in the same period last year.

“The company has faced a challengin­g environmen­t in 2019, brought on by a confluence of external factors. However, we look forward to focusing our efforts, harnessing the recent gains in sales mix and high margin products as a foundation for long-term growth,” Lao said.

D&L’s third quarter results showed emerging signs of recovery. For instance, total HMSP (High Margin Specialty Products) volume during the period was up 15 percent quarter-onquarter, coming from a slump in the second quarter of 2019.

The food ingredient­s business has started to pick up. In the third quarter alone, HMSP food ingredient­s volume grew by 7 percent y-o-y, coming from a decline of 8 percent yo-y in the second quarter.

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