Sanford boosts profit, sales climb 3.1%
Dividends remain unchanged at 23c with final payment of 14c payable on December 8.
Dividends remain unchanged at 23c with final payment of 14c payable on December 8.
Sanford, New Zealand's largest listed seafood company, reported an 8 percent gain in full-year profit although the increase reflected a year-earlier impairment tied to a discontinued business and underlying earnings were relatively flat.
Profit was $37.5 million in the year ended Sept. 30, from $34.7 million a year earlier, the Auckland-based company said in a statement. Sales rose 3.1 percent to $477.9 million, which Sanford attributed to improved prices from its king salmon farming business and higher catch volumes in its fishing business.
Profit from continuing operations fell to $37.5 million from $37.8 million a year earlier, while adjusted earnings before interest and tax were about $300,000 higher at $63.7 million. The year-earlier net profit included a $3.1 million loss from a discontinued operation after the company took a further $5 million impairment against San Nikunau, its remaining International Purse Seine (IPS) vessel, which was sold in May 2016 for $3.9 million.
Sanford kept its 2017 dividends unchanged at 23 cents with a final payment of 14 cents payable on Dec. 8 announced today. That decision reflected the company's heavy investment needs "as we continue the transition journey from a commodity fishing company to a value-focused domestic and global seafood supplier," it said. Those investments delayed the company reaching its debt/ebitda ratio target, it said.
Sanford shares hit a record $8.10 last week and slipped 0.4 percent today to $7.97. The stock had gained 18 percent this year.
In September, Amalgamated Dairies, an investment vehicle for the Goodfellow family, said it had raised about $21 million reducing its holding in Sanford to 24 percent from 27 percent.
(BusinessDesk)