Montreal Gazette

Sales in Russia likely to slide this year: BRP

Weak economy, nosediving ruble contribute to 25 per cent drop in 2014

- ROSS MAROWITS

The company that makes Ski-Doo snowmobile­s and other recreation­al equipment anticipate­s sales in Russia will continue to drop in the coming year due to a weakened ruble and economic conditions.

Although Russian consumers rushed out to buy luxury goods late in the year as the ruble nosedived, BRP Inc. said Russian revenues were down 25 per cent last year. Excluding Eastern Europe, internatio­nal revenues increased eight per cent.

“We are planning for reduced snowmobile volume in North America and a further volume decline in Russia as our distributo­r was impacted by weak snowfall and continues to be impacted by the overall economic condition,” chief executive officer Jose Boisjoli said Friday during a conference call.

BRP anticipate­s Russian sales in its current 2016 financial year will be half the level they were in its 2014 financial year.

The ongoing weakness in its largest market outside North America contribute­d to BRP issuing an outlook that disappoint­ed analysts.

The company said it expects its normalized earnings in its 2016 financial year could slip by as much as nine per cent from the $1.65 per share earned last year and range between $1.50 to $1.65 per share. That was below the $1.73 per share forecast by analysts. Overall revenues are forecast to increase by five to nine per cent compared with 10 per cent growth last year.

The outlook came as the Quebecbase­d company said Friday it swung to a profit of $8.5 million or seven cents per share in the fourth quarter from a loss of $6.2 million or five cents per share a year ago. Revenue for the three months ended Jan. 31 grew to $1.07 billion from $902.9 million a year earlier, helped by growth in North America.

Excluding financing costs, income taxes and other items, its normalized net income surged to $116.5 million or 98 cents per diluted share. That compared to $48.3 million or 41 cents per share a year earlier.

BRP was expected to earn 79 cents per share in adjusted profits on $1.02 billion of revenues, according to analysts polled by Thomson Reuters.

Analyst Benoit Poirier of Desjardins Capital Markets was optimistic about BRP’s future even though the weaker guidance offset the strong fourth-quarter results.

“We believe the ramp-up of the Mexican facilities and the recent introducti­on of compelling products ... places BRP in a good spot to continue gaining market share in fiscal year 2016 and beyond,” he wrote in a report.

BRP is building a second production facility in Mexico that will begin production of traditiona­l watercraft in the fourth quarter of the current fiscal year.

For the full year, the company earned $70.2 million or 59 cents per share, up from $59.9 million or 53 cents per share a year ago. Revenue grew 10 per cent to $3.5 billion from $3.19 billion as a 14 per cent increase in North America offset a weaker performanc­e in Eastern Europe.

 ??  ?? Russian sales of Ski-Doo snowmobile­s and other recreation­al vehicles dropped by 25 per cent last year, BRP Inc., the makers of Ski-Doo, said Friday.
Russian sales of Ski-Doo snowmobile­s and other recreation­al vehicles dropped by 25 per cent last year, BRP Inc., the makers of Ski-Doo, said Friday.

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