Business Day

PPC tumbles on earnings warning

• Cement producer’s stock falls most since 2002 as it bemoans hyperinfla­tion in Zimbabwe

- Siseko Njobeni Industrial Writer njobenis@businessli­ve.co.za

Cement producer PPC’s shares slumped more than a fifth in early trade on Thursday after the company said interim earnings could fall more than 80% because of low demand for its products in SA and shortages of foreign currency in Zimbabwe. This shines the spotlight on the challenges PPC’s new CEO, Roland van Wijnen, will grapple with in turning around SA’s largest cement maker.

Cement producer PPC’s shares slumped more than a fifth in early trade on Thursday after the company said interim earnings could fall more than 80% because of low demand for its products in SA and shortages of foreign currency in Zimbabwe.

This shines the spotlight on the challenges that PPC’s new CEO, Roland van Wijnen, who took over six weeks ago, will grapple with in turning around SA’s largest cement maker.

PPC’s shares hit a 53-week low after falling 21.28% in early trade. But the stock recovered to close 12.31% down at R3.42, the largest one-day decline since March 2002. Since the beginning of 2019, the stock has shed more than 42% of its value.

The company’s disappoint­ing performanc­e comes amid a surge in imports, lack of infrastruc­ture investment, mooted price increases in Southern Africa and weak consumer demand.

PPC must also make provision for carbon tax, which came into effect on June 1 2019. PPC has said that the effect of carbon tax would be R100m-R120m per year for cement and lime.

PPC partially attributed the expected fall in earnings to inflation in Zimbabwe exceeding 150% in the six months to endSeptemb­er.

Mish-al Emeran, an equity analyst at Electus Fund Managers said although PPC had insisted that the Zimbabwe operation was self-funding, PPC Zimbabwe’s $21m (R310m) debt due to PPC SA posed a balance sheet risk.

PPC owns 70% of PPC Zimbabwe, which includes a clinker manufactur­ing operation at Collen Bawn and two milling plants in Bulawayo.

PPC Zimbabwe is that country’s largest cement manufactur­er. The Zimbabwean operations have a total capacity of 1.4-million tons a year. PPC said in a trading statement that earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on (ebitda) in Zimbabwe was expected to fall 40%-45% from the prior period’s R352m.

“PPC has been closely monitoring the economic situation in Zimbabwe and though the business is self-sufficient, the Zimbabwe Public Accountant­s and Auditors Board [PAAB] announced that Zimbabwe is a hyperinfla­tion economy,” PPC said in a trading statement.

It said the rapid increase in inflation to more than 150% at the end of September and lack of access to foreign currency supported PAAB’s assertion about hyperinfla­tion.

PPC said other than the hyperinfla­tion in Zimbabwe, other drivers of the decline in ebitda were the “difficult trading conditions” in SA and one-off restructur­ing costs, which amounted to R85m.

PPC has a presence in SA, Botswana, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.

PPC said the group’s ebitda was expected to fall 15%-20%, compared to the ebitda of R1.03bn in the six months to September 2018.

Headline earnings per share were expected to decrease 65%85% from the prior correspond­ing period’s 21c.

THE BUSINESS IS SELFSUFFIC­IENT, BUT THE ZIMBABWE AUDITORS BOARD ANNOUNCED THAT ZIMBABWE IS A HYPERINFLA­TION ECONOMY

OTHER DRIVERS OF THE DECLINE IN EBITDA WERE THE DIFFICULT TRADING CONDITIONS IN SA AND ONE-OFF COSTS OF RESTRUCTUR­ING

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