The Citizen (Gauteng)

Denel’s road to recovery

TURNAROUND: BOOSTED BY MULTIBILLI­ON-RAND DEAL AND COST CUTS

- Sipho Mabena siphom@citizen.co.za

Chief financial officer of the parastal is cautiously optimistic for the future.

With a record multibilli­on-rand deal in the bag, a R7.8 billion order intake compared to R509 million the previous year as well as a cost reduction of half a billion rands, the beleaguere­d state defence manufactur­er Denel seems to be on the way out of the doldrums.

The R1.8 billion lifeline from the state and better leadership from the new board appointed in May last year is beginning to bear fruit for the state-owned entity that was so broke that there were uncertaint­ies over salaries just a few months ago.

Denel’s revenue slumped 38% to R3.8 billion in the 2018-19 financial year compared to R5.8 billion the year before, cash in 2018-19 was R575 million, from R1.3 billion the year before, and research and developmen­t were at R108 million, down from R769 million.

Denel made a R1.749 billion loss in 201819 compared to R1.053 million the year before and the last time it made a profit was in 2016, but Denel’s chief financial officer Carmen Le Grange said the future looked bright, but she was cautiously optimistic. She noted some progress in the parastatal’s financial health, including the signing of a R6.3 billion export order, the largest deal to date and a solid order backlog of R17.4 billion covering four years of sales revenue.

“We have made significan­t strides in the turnaround. We have competent leadership in place and a viable turnaround plan … We continue to find cost savings and efficienci­es,” she said. Le Grange also said another positive was exiting onerous contracts that should save R250 million a year and the reduction of operating costs by R500 million, including R15 million at head office level.

“Divesting from non-core assets can generate cash of R1.56 billion, with the first results in a three to six month window. Further operating cost reduction has the potential to save R500 million through the supply chain,” she said.

Employee numbers have been reduced, partly through voluntary severance packages, with 3 968 employees at present, down by 900 over the last 16 months.

Le Grange said Denel planned to discontinu­e some of its core business products and keep other core products and systems, such as artillery, missiles, infantry systems, the Overberg Test Range, systems integratio­n division, cyber capabiliti­es and Rheinmetal­l Denel Munition.

Denel would shed its aerostruct­ures business, foundry, property portfolio, Gear Ration division of Denel Vehicle Systems, Denel Sovereign Security Solutions, canine unit, Denel Land Systems, Spaceteq and insurance company Densecure. Strategic partnershi­ps would be developed regarding aircraft and engine maintenanc­e, repair and overhaul (MRO), the Rooivalk attack helicopter, unmanned aerial vehicles, maritime MRO and armoured vehicles.

We’ve made significan­t strides in the turnaround

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