Daily Tribune (Philippines) - HotSpot

COMMERCIAL OPERATIONS OF D&L’S NATURAL AEROPACK PLANT MOVED TO JANUARY 2023 

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3 March 2022 — The start of commercial operations (SCO) for D&L Industries’ Natura Aeropack Corporatio­n (NAC) plant in Batangas will be moved to January 2023, following an extension granted by the Board of the Philippine Economic Zone Authority.

NAC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of D&L Industries that will manufactur­e coconut oleochemic­als for various consumer care products, was slated for commercial operations by May 2022. However, in considerat­ion of the recent turn of events such as the Omicron-related surge in Covid-19 cases early this year, global port congestion and supply chain disruption­s, as well as longer-than-expected processing of registrati­on and licenses, PEZA has granted a SCO extension to January 2023.

As such, NAC and D&L Premium Foods Corp., which is another wholly-owned subsidiary of D&L Industries located at its Batangas site, will now start commercial operations concurrent­ly. DLPF will manufactur­e food ingredient­s to cater to the company’s growing export business.

“While the pandemic has posed challenges to the completion of our Batangas plant, this expansion is coming at an opportune time given the strong demand for high value coconut-based products in the export market. This is evidenced by the resilient and robust growth in our export sales which grew 55 percent

YOY in the first nine months of 2021. As the world moves beyond this pandemic, this plant will help us cater to emerging, relevant industries where we see opportunit­ies for new growth. Our existing capacity is still sufficient to serve requiremen­ts in the near

P5 billion to help fund the remaining capex for this expansion. The bonds carry a coupon rate of 2.7885 percent p.a. and 3.5962 percent p.a. for the 3-year and 5-year bond, respective­ly, which are among the lowest rates in Philippine corporate bond history.

Once completed, the new plant will be instrument­al to the company’s future growth, in line with plans to develop more high value-added coconutbas­ed products and penetrate new internatio­nal markets. It will mainly cater to D&L’S growing export business in the food and oleochemic­als segment. It will add the capability to manufactur­e downstream packaging, thus allowing the company to capture a bigger part of the production chain. For instance, while the company primarily sells raw materials to customers in bulk, the new plants will allow it to “pack at source”. This means that D&L will have the ability to process the raw materials and package them closer to finished consumer-facing products. This will enable D&L to move a step closer to its customers by providing customized solutions and simplifyin­g their supply chain, which is of high importance given ongoing global logistical challenges.

As of the third quarter last year, D&L’S earnings are already back to pre-pandemic levels with 3Q21 net income surging 25 percent vs. 3Q19 and 9M21 net income growing by 7 percent vs. 9M19. Year-onyear, 3Q21 net income grew by +34 percent to P768 million. With near-term catalysts such as the continued economic reopening and the boost from election spending, the company sees room for further earnings growth.

 ?? ?? NAC, a D&L unit, makes coco oleochemic­als in Batangas plant.
NAC, a D&L unit, makes coco oleochemic­als in Batangas plant.

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