The National - News

Agility first-quarter net income climbs on higher revenue

- SARMAD KHAN

Kuwait-based Agility, one of the biggest logistics companies in the Middle East and North Africa, reported a 1 per cent rise in first quarter net income as revenue climbed.

Net profit attributab­le to equity holders of the parent company for the period to the end of March climbed to 12.8 million Kuwaiti dinars ($41.7m), including income from discontinu­ed operations of its unit Global Integrated Logistics, Agility said in a filing to the Dubai Financial Market, where its shares are traded.

Quarterly profits before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on jumped almost 72 per cent to 34m dinars. The company’s revenue at the end of March rose 22.3 per cent to 132.1m dinars. “We started the year on a good note, with our controlled businesses reporting healthy growth year over year,” Agility vice chairman Tarek Sultan said.

“Despite challengin­g market and geopolitic­al conditions, we expect continued growth and performanc­e in our operations this year.”

The company will continue to focus on accelerati­ng growth “organicall­y and inorganica­lly”, he said.

Last year, Agility sold its core logistics business, GIL, to Danish company DSV Panalpina, which is the world’s third-largest freight and logistics provider, in exchange for 19.3 million shares in DSV.

Agility reported a one-time gain of about 1 billion dinars and is now the second-largest shareholde­r in DSV with an 8 per cent stake.

The January-March profits are the first quarterly numbers reported by Agility since the GIL deal. Agility will report profit for two segments controlled businesses and investment­s to better reflect the company’s valuation the performanc­e of each segment, it said.

In March, Agility said it would fully acquire UK-based John Menzies for £571m ($751m) through its unit National Aviation Services to create an airport services giant amid a steady recovery in air travel from the Covid-19 pandemic.

As a combined company, Menzies and NAS are expected to be the largest airport services company in the world by the number of countries in which they operate.

They are the second largest in terms of airports served and the third-largest company in combined revenue that topped $1.5bn last year.

“Our recent offer for Menzies Aviation is a good example of our growth commitment,” Mr Sultan said. “For our investment segment, DSV is our largest holding and we continue to believe in DSV’s long-term growth and in the freight forwarding sector.”

The company will continue to look for opportunit­ies to expand its investment portfolio, he said.

“We believe we can create value for our shareholde­rs by investing in companies in high-growth sectors with strong fundamenta­ls, strong, proven management teams, best-practices governance and alignment with our vision and values,” he said.

Agility’s total assets reached 2.8bn dinars, while its net debt stood at 385.2m dinars as of the end of March.

Its operating cash flow reached 22.7m during the same period, the company said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates