The Scotsman

Wood Group ‘out-delivering’ on order book

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Wood, the Aberdeen-headquarte­red energy and engineerin­g services heavyweigh­t, has set a course for betterthan-expected core profits thanks to a strong order book and work on major green energy projects.

Chief executive Ken Gilmartin said the group was now one year into its “strategic growth journey” and its results were showing clear progress. “We are excited about the trajectory that we are on,” he told The Scotsman. “We have out-delivered in year one, which we are very proud of. We have seen growth in all of our end markets and sectors and we have been outperform­ing in some areas. We have also kept costs contained even though we are growing, which is another strong positive for us.”

Investors reacted positively to the news that adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­onandamort­isation(ebitda) for 2023 were now forecast to come in at around $420 million (£329m) to $425m, up by some 9 per cent. Revenue was up by a similar percentage to $6 billion (£4.7bn) with good growth across all business units, the group said in a trading update ahead of March’s full-year results.

Wood’s order book of around $6.1bn is up 4 per cent on a comparable basis with about 40 per cent of the bidding pipeline now from “sustainabl­e solutions”, up from 35 per cent. The group, which employs some 36,000 people globally, highlighte­d a number of significan­t contract wins in the fourth quarter including supporting one of the world’s largest offshore clean power projects in Germany, work for a “world-leading” green hydrogen project in Spain and a two-year operations contract extension with Equinor in the Mariner field in the North Sea.

Gilmartin said: “We have a very balanced order book. We’ve got energy, we’ve got energy security, we are seeing growth in the energy transition space where there is a high degree of engineerin­g complexity and we have some of the brightest and best engineers on the planet. That capability has been developed over decades.

“We have geographic diversific­ation - our eggs are not all in one basket. The Middle East has been growing strongly for us as has the UK and North America. Our job is always to position ourselves so that we continue to grow and to provide the solutions for our clients.”

The update comes after US private equity suitor Apollo Management dropped its proposed takeover of Wood last May. Apollo had put forward a series of bid proposals, with the last one for 240p a share in cash, valuing the Scots group at almost £1.7bn.

Analysts at investment firm Investec noted: “Wood has delivered a strong set of results, delivering slightly ahead of expectatio­ns and is demonstrat­ing strong signs of progress on its growth strategy with another strong quarter of revenue and Ebitda growth."

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