Fish Farmer

Contract ties, low volumes hit NRS profits for Q2

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NORWAY Royal Salmon has paid a heavy price for its dependence on contract sales, the company’s second quarter results show.

NRS, now part of the SalMar group, today reported an operationa­l EBIT or profit of NOK 32m (£2.7m) against NOK 94m (£8.1m) for the same period last year. The April-June period this year was marked by exceptiona­lly high salmon prices which resulted in several companies reporting record profits, but NRS was unable to gain much advantage from that situation.

CEO Charles Høstlund said: “NRS has harvested a low volume and, as announced in the previous quarterly presentati­on, we therefore have an unusually high share of the Norwegian volume on fixed price contracts.

“The price achievemen­t in relation to the spot price has thus been low and this significan­tly affects the result in this quarter.”

On the plus side, NRS has reported a solid financial position with NOK 1,694 (£147m) in unutilised credit facilities and NOK 80m (almost £7m) in bank deposits.

Farming Norway posted an operationa­l EBIT of NOK 34.8m (£3m) in the quarter, compared with MNOK 96.3 (£8.4m) last year.The operationa­l EBIT per kg gutted weight was almost four times higher at NOK 48.16 compared with NOK 12.49 in Q2 2021. However, the Norway harvest, which was hit earlier by winter sore issues, was

56% lower at 3,442 tonnes. Farming Iceland fared better, posting an operationa­l EBIT of NOK 37.9m (£3.2m) in the quarter, compared with NOK 17.6m (£1.5m) 12 months ago.

Commenting on the SalMar deal, CEO Høstlund, said:“The foundation is therefore in place and the merger provides an even stronger basis for value creation and employment in the areas where NRS operates.”

 ?? ?? Above: Norway Royal Salmon farm
Above: Norway Royal Salmon farm

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