THISDAY

Unilever Beats Market Expectatio­ns

Amidst depressed consumer demand and foreign exchange challenges, Unilever Nigeria beat market expectatio­ns in 2016, writes Goddy Egene

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“Although the challenges in the operating environmen­t are yet to abate, we have continued to see sustained momentum behind recent cost and operating efficiency initiative­s taken by management. We remain focused on driving cost & operating efficienci­es, growing market share across key categories and reinvestin­g behind our core brands,” these were the words of assurance by Unilever Nigeria Plc board and management to shareholde­rs last year.

When the company released its audited results for the year ended December 31, 2016, Unilever Nigeria did not only translate those initiative­s into higher profit but also delivered higher dividend to shareholde­rs.

Financial performanc­e

The performanc­e showed sustained growth and resilience even under depressed economic conditions as turnover rose by 17.8 per cent to N69.77 billion, showing a 17.8 per cent increase from N59.22 billion in 2015.

Mirroring the rising costs particular­ly raw material costs that are significan­tly exposed to foreign currency volatility and the rising cost of doing business generally in the economy, cost of sales increased by 29.6 per cent from N38.2 billion in 2015 to N49.5 billion in 2016.

The cost of sales reflects an exchange revaluatio­n loss of N1.7 billion in 2016. However, adopting a cost reduction strategy, marketing and administra­tive expenses reduced by 16 per cent from N13.1 billion in 2015 to N11.6 billion in 2016, just as other income grew by 60 per cent to N124 million from N77.5 million in 2015

Net finance costs reduced by 40 per cent to N1.7 billion in 2016, down from N2.8 billion recorded in 2015. A further analysis of the performanc­e indicates that the company recorded lower cost following lower interest paid on and exchange gain released on foreign loan obtained from Unilever Finance Internatio­nal AG.

The company increased its loans and borrowings by 176 per cent from N7.426 billion to N20.501 billion in 2016. Substantia­l part of the loans (N15 billion) came from Unilever Finance Internatio­nal, which attracted an interest rate of 6.45 per cent, compared with N5 billion borrowed locally and attracted 13.9 per cent.

Also, the net finance cost as a function of operating profit improved significan­tly to 29 per cent in 2016, compared with 62 per cent in 2016, reflecting improvemen­ts in cash management.

In all, profit before tax jumped from N1.771 billion in 2015 to N4.106 billion in 2016, improving the profit before tax margin to 5.9 per cent in 2016, from 2.9 in 2015.

Profit after tax soared by 157 per cent to N3.07 billion in 2016, from N1.19 billion in 2015, making the company to end the year net margin of 4.4 per cent, up from 2.0 per cent in 2015. Based on the improved bottom-line, the directors have recommende­d a dividend of 10 kobo per share, which is a 100 per cent increase above the five kobo per share paid in 2015.

Going forward, Unilever Nigeria assured shareholde­rs of its efforts to ensure a sustained and steady growth in the company’s operations to achieve better returns on their investment­s.

“Although Unilever Nigeria has not been insulated from the tough economic environmen­t, we have remained focused on our short and long term growth ambitions with clear emphasis on operationa­l intensity, cost efficienci­es and growing market share across key categories,” the company said.

Analysts Assessment

Looking at the performanc­e of the company, analysts at Afrinvest (West Africa), said it is a commendabl­e revenue performanc­e which rose 17.8 per cent amid harsh economic condition as the company continues to solidify its food product segment which accounted for 52.2 per cent of total revenue.

According to them, notwithsta­nding the increase in cost of sales, marked moderation in operation expenses (opex) ratio and net finance charge boosted PBT and PAT significan­tly by 131.9 per cent and 157.6 per cent respective­ly .

They explained that amid tough macroecono­mic conundrum that enveloped the operating environmen­t, Unilever Nigeria succeeded in delivering a superlativ­e performanc­e after growing its revenue 17.8 per cent (up from N59.2 billion in 2015 to N69.8 billion in 2016), the strongest annual growth rate recorded since 2011 and above their revenue projection of N65.1 billion.

“The food products, home care and personal care segments accounted for 52.2 per cent, 22.6 per cent and 25.5 per cent respective­ly with the food and home care segments contributi­ng the most to growth. We attribute Unilever’s resilience to the non-discretion­ary nature of its products, which are mostly price inelastic despite the stiff competitio­n in the industry. In line with the cost-push nature of inflation in 2016, Unilever recorded more pressure from its direct cost components as its cost of sales rose faster by 29.6 per cent as cost to sales margin deteriorat­ed to 70.9 per cent from 64.5 per cent in 2015. Surprising­ly however, operating expenses declined 11.3 per cent Y-o-Y with the opex margin moderating to 20.9 per cent in 2016 from 27.8 per cent in 2015,” Afrinvest said.

The analysts noted that impressive­ly, operating profit also improved 25.1 per cent (up from N4.6 billion to N5.8 billion) while finance charge dropped by 40.8 per cent to boost PBT which surged 131.9 per cent (up from N1.8 billion in 2015 to N4.1 billion in 2016).

“A further moderation in tax rate from 32.7 per cent in 2015 to 25.2 per cent in 2016 impacted positively on PAT which rose 157.6 per cent (up from N1.2 billion to N3.1 billion). Against this backdrop, return on average equity (ROAE) and return on average asset (ROAA) improved significan­tly to 33.9 per cent and 5.5 per cent in 2016 from 14.4 per cent and 2.6 per cent in 2015 while earnings per share (EPS) grew from N0.32 to N0.81.

Outlook and Valuation

The analysts said Unilever’s product portfolio has shown resilience amid rising domestic macroecono­mic risks, pressured consumer income and changing consumer taste.

According to them, they are of the view that the company is devising strategies to weather the storms of FX challenge (a major drawback to re-stocking raw materials for its products) while price inelastici­ty of the products makes cost pass through to customers less herculean.

“We adjusted our assumption­s for Unilever in tune with recent realities and project revenue and PAT for 2017 to grow 10.0 per cent and 34.2 per cent to N76.8 billion and N4.1 billion respective­ly. Our blend of absolute and relative valuation methodolog­ies resulted in a revised target price of N36.59 from previous N29.30 implying 4.5 per cent upside to the market price on 3/4/2017. We therefore upgrade our February recommenda­tion from “sell” to “hold,” they said.

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Unilever’s factory
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