Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

JKH 1Q succumbs to pandemic-related biz disruption­s

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„June quarter revenue slumps 32% to Rs.21.6bn with earnings turning to negative to Rs.1.7bn „Leisure sector remains a drag on group; others seen recovering to near pre-pandemic levels „Pent-up demand seen in leisure sector as forward bookings exceed previous year levels „Group declares a dividend of 50 cents a share considerin­g faster recovery in business

John Keells Holdings PLC (JKH) succumbed to the pandemicin­duced business disruption­s during the April-june 2020 quarter (1Q21), as the lockdowns, which remained for half of the quarter, erased nearly a third of its revenues, plunging the group deep into red.

But the premier blue chip closed the quarter with business activity reaching near pre-pandemic levels, barring its leisure sector.

JKH, which has its business interest in transporta­tion, consumer foods, retail, leisure, property and financial services, recorded revenues of Rs.21.6 billion for the three months under review, over Rs.10 billion short of the revenues recorded a year earlier, as the diversifie­d entity had only limited defensive business units, which could shield it from the economic shocks brought in by the pandemic.

The group’s leisure sector became the immediate casualty of the lockdowns, as its hotels and resorts, both in Sri Lanka and the Maldives, were left with no business at all for nearly three months, until the local resorts reopened for local visitors from June. This sector delivered the group with the biggest blow in terms of bottom line impact compared to others, as the leisure sector net loss more than doubled to Rs.2.5 billion during the quarter, from a loss of Rs.1 billion in the year earlier period, due to massive fixed costs.

JKH said it took several proactive measures to conserve cash and maintain liquidity such as freezing of non-essential capital expenditur­e, cost containmen­t initiative­s such as reduction in executive staff remunerati­on and productivi­ty improvemen­t measures.

JKH however reported a net loss of Rs.1.66 billion or a loss of Rs.1.26 a share for the quarter under review, compared to a profit of Rs.994.3 million or earnings of 75 cents a share in the comparable period in 2019.

Despite the losses, the company declared a dividend of 50 cents a share, which comes to a payout of Rs.659 million to be paid on or before August 28, as the group is witnessing a “faster than anticipate­d recovery momentum in business activity and the generation of cash profits by the group”, JKH said in an earnings release.

Although the bookings for the next few weeks are low, the company’s hospitalit­y sector is now seeing encouragin­g forward bookings for the peak season of January to April 2021, exceeding the bookings it had for the same period last fiscal year, “demonstrat­ing the ‘pentup’ demand for leisure travel should restrictio­ns on travel ease,” JKH Chairman Krishan Balendra said.

Meanwhile, the group’s retail business saw a faster recovery with the easing of the lockdowns with a steady increase in customer footfall close to pre-pandemic levels. Same store sales growth for the month of June has also recovered to negative single-digit levels, compared to the decline of 45 percent on average during April and May.

However, the operator of ‘Keells’-branded supermarke­t chain is observing some change in the shopping patterns of customers in the aftermath of the pandemic, where there is a change in the frequency and purchase patterns due to consolidat­ion of baskets.

Retail sector revenues however declined to Rs.12.4 billion in the quarter, from Rs.15.7 billion in the year earlier period, as store visits were restricted for nearly one and half months while the e-commerce could not fully offset the in-store sales, which the company had to forgo during lockdowns. This sector made a net loss of Rs.273.4 million, compared to Rs.141.6 million in the year earlier period.

Meanwhile, the consumer foods segment, which produced processed foods, frozen foods, confection­eries and beverages, recorded a revenue of Rs.3.2 billion for the quarter, compared to Rs.4.5 billion a year ago.

The company’s frozen confection­ary and convenienc­e foods have seen a positive volume growth in June but its beverage business recorded a low single-digit decline.

This segment recorded a net profit of Rs.140.8 million, compared to Rs.406.6 million in the year earlier period.

Meanwhile, the group’s transporta­tion segment revenues dropped to Rs.3.14 billion, from Rs.5.5 billion in the year earlier period while the earnings of the segment slumped to Rs.293.2 million, from Rs.961.7 million in the year earlier period.

The financial services segment of the group, which predominan­tly captures the performanc­e of Nations Trust Bank PLC and Union Assurance PLC, reported revenues of Rs.2.3 billion, little down from Rs.2.5 billion while the earnings rose to Rs.399.5 million, from Rs.314.9 million a year ago.

Commenting on the group’s flagship mixed developmen­t project, Cinnamon Life, JKH said its constructi­on work resumed in mid-may after two months and added that “the finishing work of the apartment and office towers are being re-sequenced to be completed within the financial year to enable handover”.

Being the main local buyer during the quarter, the Life Fund of Sri Lanka Insurance Corporatio­n Limited accumulate­d 10.5 million shares of JKH, increasing its stake to 1.1 percent, from 0.3 percent of the conglomera­te. SLIC remains its eighteenth largest shareholde­r.

 ??  ?? Krishan Balendra
Krishan Balendra

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