Business Day (Nigeria)

Okomu, Presco’s revenue, profit surge on tight global supplies

- By Favour Ashinze

PALM oil prices hit an all-time high in 2022, partly due to export limitation­s put in place by the Indonesian government and the disruption the Russia-ukraine war generated in the market for sunflower oil.

Nigeria is the world’s fifth-largest palm oil producer, yet it still imports more vegetable fat than it exports. And the reason for this is that the current local production cannot keep up with domestic demand. Nigeria currently produces 1.4 million metric tons of crude palm oil as against 1.7 million metric tons it consumes.

Kayode Eseyin, a research analyst at Lagos-based Cardinalst­one Partners, said the palm oil industry in Nigeria is unable to meet local demand because of reliance on subsistent or inefficien­t farming, insecurity, and inadequate access to credit.

Eseyin explained that the Nigerian palm oil industry is very fragmented and dominated by numerous small-scale farmers, who account for 80 percent of local production and most of these farmers are not attuned to modern farming practices, meaning their yields and output are way lower than it could otherwise be.

However, since palm oil is widely used in cooking and manufactur­ing consumer food products in Nigeria, high prices have stoked consumer inflation and pushed the government to encourage local producers to meet the supply gap.

While most of the palm oil is sourced from small farmers supplying it to the local market, large producers, such as Presco and Okomu, are well placed to benefit from government support, strong internatio­nal demand, and high prices.

Presco owns four large oil palm estates covering 39,500 hectares (including the recently announced Siat Nigeria Ltd acquisitio­n) and palm oil processing, refining, and storage capacities. In recent years, revenue and profitabil­ity benefited from growth in Fresh Fruit Bunches (FFB) production, high Crude Palm Oil (CPO) market prices, and efficienci­es of scale.

Okomu follows a dual-product strategy, with 85 percent of its revenue derived from palm oil products and 15 percent from rubber products. The plantation area included about 19,000 hectares (ha) of oil palm and about 7,300ha of rubber at end-2021. These effectivel­y make Okomu’s dual-product strategy to provide it with steady growth.

However, analysts from Lagosbased CSL Stockbroke­rs Limited believe that a global slowdown could impact demand and pricing.

Profit and revenue hit highest in 8 years

Due to the rising prices of crude palm oil (CPO), Nigeria’s two largest palm oil producers, Okomu Oil Palm and Presco Plc, each recorded their best earnings and revenues in eight (8) years.

Okomu Oil Palm saw its revenue surge by 63.63 percent in the nine-month (9M’2022) period that ended September 2022 to N50.79 billion from N31.04 billion in the correspond­ing period of 2021. Further analysis shows that the palm oil company generated N46.29 billion from local sales and N3.89 billion from export sales.

Consequent­ly, profits grew by 55.60 percent to N18.1 billion in the nine-month period that ended September 2022 from N11.6 billion in the same period last year.

Presco Plc reported a 72.98 percent surge in revenue to N59.21 billion in the nine-month period that ended September 2022 from N34.23 percent in the same period in 2021.

Profit reported by the palm oil producer also grew by 15.24 percent to N15.88 billion in September 2022 from N13.78 billion in September 2021.

Shrinking profit margin on elevated input costs

Businessda­y analysis of the ninemonth financial results of the palm oil manufactur­ers showed that their profit margins, the amount by which revenue from sales exceeds costs in a business, shrank on rising input costs.

Okomu’s profit margin was down by 183 basis points to 35.54 percent in September 2022 from 37.37 percent in September 2021, while Presco Plc’s profit margin declined by 1,344 basis points to 26.62 percent in September 2022, down from 40.26 percent in September 2021.

Soaring inflation has led to elevated input costs for these palm oil producers, as the cost of sales reported by them increases year on year. Data from the Central Bank of

Nigeria shows that inflation in Nigeria, as of September 2022 rose to 20.77 percent from 20.52 as of August 2022.

Okomu’s cost of sales increased by 356 percent to N14.4 billion in the nine-month period that ended September 2022 from N3.16 billion in the correspond­ing period of 2021.

In the same vein, the cost of sales reported by Presco Plc surged by 92.06 percent in September 2022 to N20.57 billion from N10.71 billion in September 2021.

Cash position

Cash and cash equivalent­s, that is, the value of a company’s assets that are cash or can be converted into cash immediatel­y reported by Okomu Oil Palm in the nine-month period that ended September 2022 amounted to N9.65 billion, showing a 16.83 percent increase from N8.26 billion reported in the nine-month period of 2021.

According to the movement of its cash and cash equivalent­s reported in the company’s cash flow statement, the palm oil maker generated N22.78 billion from its key operations during the period.

Further analysis shows that Okomu Oil Palm reported a negative net cash flow from investing activities to the tune of N7.94 billion in 9M’2022, due to property, plant, and equipment acquired during the period totaling N7.58 billion, and pre-cropping expenditur­e the firm incurred during the period which amounted to N365 million.

According to analysts at CSL Stockbroke­rs Limited, the company has benefited from recent high palm oil prices. “In our view, the company should be able to meet its long-term debt obligation­s through regular cash flow. Expansion plans include adding milling capacity and sourcing FFBS from small farmers to enhance its CPO plantation base.”

Presco Plc, on the other hand, saw its cash and cash equivalent­s decline by 25.35 percent to N9.60 billion in the nine-month period that ended September 2022 from N12.86 in the correspond­ing period of 2021.

The firm’s cash flow from operations improved during the period (9M’2022) amounting to N876 million from negative N6.43 billion reported in 9M’2021.

As part of investing activities, the palm oil producer also acquired property, plant, and equipment worth N7.59 billion during the period.

Cash flow from financing activities reported by Presco Plc amounted to negative N2.34 billion in 9M’2022, primarily due to N28.56 billion spent repaying loans it obtained, N6.6 billion dividends it paid out, and N5.97 billion interests paid.

Presco obtained a loan amounting to N38.79 billion during the nine-month period that ended in September 2022.

Borrowing costs in a high-interest rate environmen­t (MPR at 15.50%)

Okomu’s total borrowings (shortterm and long-term) for the ninemonth period ended September 2022 stood at N11.71 billion, a 6.07 percent increase from N11.04 billion reported in the same period last year. Interest on long-term loans surged by 964 percent to N479.7 million in September 2022 from N45.08 million in September 2021.

Presco Plc’s total borrowings stood at N65.7 billion in September 2022, which was 185 percent higher than the N23.07 billion reported in September 2021. Its finance costs surged by 993 percent to N5.97 billion in September 2022 from N546 million in September 201.

“Presco’s leverage more than doubled to 4.7x in 2021 from 2.1x in 2017, increasing the company’s exposure to market risks amid growing inflation and higher benchmark interest rates.

“We believe management needs to raise additional capital through a rights issue or from majority shareholde­r, SIAT SA, to reduce debt levels,” CSL Stockbroke­rs Limited, stated in a note to investors.

Market value

The share prices of both companies combined are up 26.5 percent, taking their market capitalisa­tion to N282 billion as of November 11, compared to N223 billion at the beginning of the year.

Okomu’s share price is up 19.37 percent to N169.5 per share as of November 11, 2022, from N142 per share at the beginning of the year.

Presco’s share price is up 37.2 percent from N87.80 per share at the beginning of the year to N120.5 per share as of November 11, 2022.

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