National Post (National Edition)

Aecon Group notches record revenues, boosts dividend.

Constructi­on firm boosts its dividend

- Christophe­r reynolds

MONTREAL• On the heels of record annual revenues and successful project bids, Aecon Group Inc. says it is not yet feeling any pressure from high-risk, fixed-bid infrastruc­ture contracts it will face over the next couple of years.

“So far, none of those big jobs have experience­d ... problems during the beginning of the execution,” JeanLouis Servranckx, who came on board as CEO last September, said on a conference call with investors Wednesday.

“I remind you that most of them just begin with almost one year of detailed engineerin­g, so this is where we are, and some preparator­y works.”

The constructi­on firm logged a 16-per-cent increase in revenues to $3.27 billion last year, up from $2.81 billion in 2017.

About 42 per cent of Aecon’s 2018 revenue derived from fixed-price contracts — under which companies have to eat any cost overruns. That slice is set to expand, as nearly two-thirds of its backlog revenues are set to come from fixed-price contracts.

The company has secured new infrastruc­ture contracts worth $5.8 billion, propelling the year-end backlog to a record of $6.8 billion.

The launch of the constructi­on phase of both the Finch West LRT project in Toronto and the Gordie Howe Internatio­nal Bridge project between Windsor, Ont., and Detroit drove “stellar” quarterly results via higher management and developmen­t fees in the fourth quarter, said Benoit Poirier of Desjardins Securities.

“Most importantl­y, (Aecon) reiterated its positive outlook for 2019, as its record backlog and robust pipeline of opportunit­ies as well as its ongoing concession­s should lead to an improved adjusted EBITDA margin,” Poirier said in a research note, referring to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on.

Other major projects booked last year include Montreal’s REM light-rail project and the Site C dam in B.C., scheduled for completion in 2022 and 2023, respective­ly.

Servranckx said Aecon is establishi­ng a new urban transporta­tion segment to sharpen the focus on certain projects, such as the Montreal REM and the Finch LRT.

“We just feel that these projects are special,” he said.

The company has equity stakes and 30-year maintenanc­e contracts on both the Finch LRT and Gordie Howe bridge projects, as well as the Eglinton Crosstown LRT project in Toronto, slated for completion in 2021. It will also handle post-constructi­on operations for the bridge and Eglinton light rail line.

Last August the firm rejoined the consortium slated to build and operate the Howe bridge after pulling out in May as it was undergoing a federal review about a proposed takeover of Aecon by a Chinese stateowned company that was ultimately blocked by the Canadian government on national security grounds.

Meanwhile, long-term projects such as the refurbishm­ent of Ontario’s Darlington nuclear plant through 2026 should provide financial stability, Aecon said.

The $5.8 billion in new awards last year — a marked increase over new contracts of $2.8 billion in 2017 — also included $263 million last quarter for the Coastal Gaslink pipeline, a controvers­ial $6.2-billion project slated to traverse the traditiona­l territorie­s of 20 First Nations in northern B.C.

The Toronto-based company said it has raised its quarterly dividend by two cents per share to 14.5 cents.

Net profits jumped 32 per cent to $27.9 million last quarter, from $21.1 million a year earlier, Aecon said.

That equalled 41 cents per diluted share, up from 33 cents in the previous year’s quarter but below analysts’ expectatio­ns of 44 cents.

 ?? COLE BURSTON / BLOOMBERG ?? Aecon is establishi­ng a new urban transporta­tion segment to sharpen the focus on certain projects, such as light rail in Montreal and Toronto.
COLE BURSTON / BLOOMBERG Aecon is establishi­ng a new urban transporta­tion segment to sharpen the focus on certain projects, such as light rail in Montreal and Toronto.

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