Business Day

Drought ‘will slow growth’

• Kaap Agri CEO is expecting only single-digit gains in earnings as many farmers battle with water shortages

- Marc Hasenfuss Editor at Large hasenfussm@fm.co.za

Kaap Agri says that it expects the prolonged drought in certain farming areas of the Western Cape will slow its earnings growth in the first half of the financial year to end-September 2018.

Agriservic­es specialist Kaap Agri — which has a strong retail offering — expects prolonged drought conditions in certain farming areas of the Western Cape to slow earnings growth in the first half of the financial year to end September 2018.

Speaking at Kaap Agri’s annual general meeting in Malmesbury on Thursday, CEO Sean Walsh expected growth to slow to single-digit gains in the first half.

He noted the drought in the Western Cape — where Kaap Agri has its roots — was the most severe in the past 10 years. “Farmers are under pressure and cutting back on spending on their farms,” said Walsh.

He said that Kaap Agri’s businesses were feeling the most pressure in rural areas. “In the country areas, the entire business community is related to the health of the farmers.” However, he pointed out that sales in Kaap Agri’s urban stores were growing at a sprightly 20% a year — mitigating the effect of the drought.

Walsh was still hopeful of a strong outcome for the full year. “If circumstan­ces return to normal we think it’s still possible for Kaap Agri to produce doubledigi­t growth for the full financial year.” He said the company would only be in a position to provide more accurate full-year growth guidance around July.

Asked to quantify the effect of the drought on the bottom line, Walsh said expected compound annual growth rates of about 15% would be tempered by between 5% and 6%. “We would get growth of 9%-10%, meaning the drought would take away roughly a third of our growth rate. That’s a third of our growth rate — and not a third of our earnings!” he said. Walsh also indicated that in first-quarter trading, Kaap Agri’s retail segment, which includes the Agrimark stores, convenienc­e stores, liquor stores and building supplies, for the first time contribute­d more than the traditiona­l agriservic­es segment. Although agriservic­es (irrigation and grain storage) represente­d 44% of turnover, the segment accounted for only 33% of trading profit. Retail only accounted for 20% of turnover, but represente­d a chunky 34% of trading profit.

Walsh reiterated that Kaap Agri was on “a very acquisitiv­e strategy in the retail fuel space”.

He said shareholde­rs could expect the portion of capital expenditur­e earmarked for acquisitio­ns to increase, but said that strict feasibilit­y criteria needed to be met before any deals were struck.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Dry and hard: Kaap Agri has its roots in the Western Cape and says the drought there was the most severe in the past 10 years.
/Reuters Dry and hard: Kaap Agri has its roots in the Western Cape and says the drought there was the most severe in the past 10 years.

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