The New Zealand Herald

Earnings tipped to ease for F&P Healthcare

Market forecasts expect more normal profits after last year’s Covid-driven record

- Jamie Gray

Fisher and Paykel Healthcare’s earnings look set to return to more normal levels after last year’s record, Covid-19 pandemic-driven result.

A Bloomberg consensus of market forecasts for tomorrow’s result was for an annual net profit of $376.9 million, down from last year’s bumper $524.2m profit, but well up on the March 2020 year’s profit of $307.4m.

Market expectatio­ns are for the respirator­y products maker’s revenue to drop to $1.70 billion from $1.97b in the previous financial year.

Brokers Forsyth Barr said the market’s focus will be on the mix of the company’s earnings and on forwardloo­king commentary, particular­ly in relation to costs.

“We assume a sharp second half decline in hardware revenue and broadly flat consumable­s revenue,” Forsyth Barr said.

The broker also assumed modest revenue growth in the homecare group — which includes products used in the treatment of obstructiv­e sleep apnoea and respirator­y support in the home — in the second half.

Further out, Forsyth Barr has forecast 2023 net profit of $290m — well down on the market consensus of $343m.

In a business update in March, F&P Healthcare said it expects full-year operating revenue for the 2022 financial year to be in the range of $1.675b to $1.70b.

Managing director and chief executive officer Lewis Gradon said then that second-half hospital consumable­s revenue was tracking to be similar to that reported in the first half. “This is consistent with reports of the increasing prevalence of the Omicron variant over the last two months and its associated lower respirator­y interventi­on requiremen­ts, as well as a relatively mild flu season in the Northern Hemisphere,” he said at the time.

“Regardless of how Covid-19 effects unfold over the short term, we are confident our business is wellplaced to contribute to a positive change in clinical practice and improving outcomes for respirator­y patients in general over the long term,” Gradon said.

Adrian Allbon, director, equity research at Jarden, said it would be a no surprises result.

“Expectatio­ns for 2022 are well understood given the revenue downgrade in mid-March, so our focus will be on the CEO’s outlook commentary and plans for capturing the stronger longer-run growth opportunit­y,” he said in a commentary.

“For us, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare is now back in defensive value territory, but near-term earnings momentum remains negative and difficult to calibrate as the hospitals cycle back to more normal activities post-Covid.”

F&P Healthcare’s share price rocketed to a peak of $37.68 in August 2020 on the back of Covid-19 demand.

While it has since drifted back to more sedate levels, last trading at $21.00, the company is still the NZX’s biggest by market cap — $12.16 billion.

According to World Heath Organisati­on data, the rate of Covid infection around the world has fallen sharply since January.

 ?? Photo / Dean Purcell ?? F&P Healthcare recorded a bumper $524.2m profit last year as a result of Covid-19.
Photo / Dean Purcell F&P Healthcare recorded a bumper $524.2m profit last year as a result of Covid-19.

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