Cape Times

Retrenchme­nt costs hurt OneLogix to the tune of R4.4 million

- Roy Cokayne

FOUR consecutiv­e years of a downturn in new car sales partly contribute­d to listed specialise­d logistics group OneLogix incurring R4.4 million in retrenchme­nt costs from the retrenchme­nt of 50 people at its Vehicle Delivery Services (VDS) business in the year to May.

Ian Lourens, the group chief executive of OneLogix, said yesterday that another contributo­ry factor for the retrenchme­nts was a customer that expected VDS to enter into a three-year contract without any price escalation.

Lourens said the group had a total workforce of about 3 500 people, with the VDS business employing about 900 of them.

“We thought it imprudent to enter into that contract and the result was that we lost probably about 40-odd percent of that contract. Had we done so, we would have had continual retrenchme­nts down the road,” he said.

Post its year-end, OneLogix has embarked on a process to restructur­e and strengthen its balance sheet through the sale of its 49 percent stake in for R65m and the sale and lease-back of its Umlaas Road vehicle storage facility for R240m cash. The logistics hub has the capacity to store 9 000 passenger vehicles under cover and a further 1 000 commercial vehicles.

Conflict

Lourens said the rationale for the sale of DriveRisk was the growing conflict between OneLogix’s customers base and DriveRisk. This was bedevillin­g their relationsh­ip with the majority shareholde­r of DriveRisk to the extent that OneLogix’s continued presence as a minority shareholde­r would have been detrimenta­l to that business, he said.

Lourens said the rationale for the sale and lease-back of its Umlaas Road vehicle storage facility near Durban was that OneLogix did not want to have such a large amount of capital tied up in property and would rather invest it productive logistics assets.

He said OneLogix had signed a 10-year lease for the facility, but had an option to renew that lease for a considerab­le period and therefore was not losing control of the property.

“We will still be using it and in fact we have options on land surroundin­g that developmen­t as well. It simply means a restructur­ing of our balance and using the capital to deploy not so much into property but into assets that we can sweat a lot better,” he said.

Lourens said the effective date of the sale and lease-back transactio­n would be September 15 this year.

OneLogix yesterday reported a 15 percent increase in headline earnings a share to 29.6c from 25.7c in the previous year. Revenue rose by 12 percent to almost R2bn from R1.8bn. Operating profit improved by 9 percent to R148.2m from R135.8m.

Net cash generated from operating activities grew by 18 percent to R205.1m from R173.2m.

A final dividend a share of 5c was declared.

Shares in OneLogix dropped 1.54 percent on the JSE yesterday to close at R2.56.

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