The New Zealand Herald

Profit jump lifts Synlait shares to record

Company posts 11% gain in full-year result on back of expansion push and tips move into branded goods

- Jonathan Underhill — BusinessDe­sk

Synlait Milk shares traded at a record high after the company posted an 11 per cent gain in full-year profit and flagged further growth this year while signalling a move into branded consumer goods.

Net profit rose to $38.2 million in the 12 months ended July 31 from $34.4m a year earlier, the Dunsandel-based milk processor said. Revenue climbed 39 per cent to $759m while cost of sales rose 45 per cent to $649m.

Chief executive John Penno said he expected to see “a strong increase in profit year on year” as Synlait reaped the benefits of its investment in expanded production and a move into new products.

The business-to-business dairy products manufactur­er is looking to enter the market for branded consumer products for the first time, although Penno is coy about the details.

“Up until now we’ve been strictly B2B, which has been very important during start-up,” Penno said.

The company would move into branded products “where no conflict exists with existing partnershi­ps” which meant it was “unlikely to be in infant formula”, where companies such as A2 have very strong brands.

Synlait shares closed up 29c yesterday at a record high of $5.54.

Profit beat the $36.4m forecast of brokerage Craigs Investment Partners, which has predicted 2018 net profit of $60m, although that may be revised after the results.

“It’s a decent result from the key headlines,” said Mark Lister, head of private wealth research at Craigs.

“Net debt was down, that’s [good], and cash flow looked pretty strong as well. It looks like a reasonably solid finish to the financial year.”

Synlait raised almost $100m in new capital during the financial year to repay debt and fund its growth, including the purchase of a milk powder canning plant in Auckland capable of blending and packaging infant formula and an expansion of its wetmix facility at its Dunsandel site.

Sales and distributi­on costs, and wages rose in the year while finance costs fell as net debt tumbled to $83m from $214m.

“The past year has been one of consolidat­ion ahead of an expected period of solid earnings growth,” Penno said. “Over the past year, increased revenue has been achieved through volume growth and growth in our highvalue infant category. Increased gross profit has been invested to build capability and capacity ahead of an expected accelerati­on of our infant formula business, and preparing to launch into new high- returning categories.” Last month the company announced plans to triple sales of infant formula to Sichuanbas­ed Hope Nutritiona­ls, which already second-largest customer for finished infant formula and its largest under a Chinese label. Synlait took a 25 per cent stake in New Hope in 2015 and is itself 39 per cent owned by China’s Bright Dairy. Gross profit per metric tonne fell to $781 from $863 a year earlier while the volume of sales climbed to 141,393 tonnes from 116,402 tonnes. Chief financial officer Nigel Greenwood said the decline in gross dairy New is its profit was driven by higher growth in ingredient sales, which diluted gross profit per tonne, “as well as weaker margins within our ingredient­s sub-category”. The decline in gross profit per tonne for powders and cream was “due to tougher trading conditions for ingredient products”.

Increased milk production and the sale of 3939 tonnes of carryover impaired inventory from 2016 “at little or no margin” diluted margin per tonne, he said.

In addition, ingredient sales volumes grew 22 per cent, outpacing a 17 per cent rise for infant sales volumes, which also diluted margin per tonne.

Synlait affirmed its forecast milk price of $6.50 per kg of milksolids for the 2017/18 dairy season, up from $6.30 per kg in 2016/17.

The company has about 200 farmer-suppliers, including 60 farms supplying 225 million litres a year of a2 milk.

No dividends were declared.

 ??  ?? John Penno
John Penno

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