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Boral results reflect a “particularly challenging year”, says CEO & MD

Boral, a major international building and construction materials group, has reported a net profit after tax (NPAT) of AUS$177 million excluding significant items for the year ended 30 June 2020.
By Guy Woodford September 8, 2020 Read time: 4 mins
Zlatko Todorcevski, Boral CEO and managing director

Significant items, including a net non-cash impairment, totalled $1.316 billion, resulting in a statutory net loss after tax of $1.139bn, in line with the company’s previous announcement.

Excluding the impact of the new IFRS leasing standard (AASB16) to show movements on a comparable basis, results for the year ended 30 June 2020, include reported sales revenue of $5,728bn down 2% on the 2019 financial year, and sales revenue from continuing operations of $5,671 million down 1%

Commenting on the 2020 financial year result, Boral’s new CEO & managing director, Zlatko Todorcevski, said: “Boral’s FY2020 results reflect a particularly challenging year. Following the lower than expected first-half result from Boral North America, Boral had a difficult start to the second half of FY2020.

“Boral Australia was impacted by bushfire and flood-related events in Australia, resulting in significantly lower volumes and higher costs. This was quickly followed by COVID-19 disruptions, resulting in higher costs and production curtailments, which substantially reduced earnings for all divisions.

“Overall, second-half margins were substantially down, as flagged in the Company’s market update in May, due to lower sales and even lower production volumes together with an unfavourable shift in the sales mix and costs.

“Boral took decisive action in response to the uncertainty around COVID-19. Where demand was slowing and stock available, production was slowed to reduce cash costs and manage inventories. Targeted plant shuts and slowdowns were on top of a number of mandated full or partial temporary closures in the USA and several countries in Asia. Plant closures, production slowdowns and disruptions adversely impacted fixed cost recoveries although cash generation was strong.

“Efforts to preserve cash and strengthen liquidity resulted in $108 million of cash flows from inventory reductions. Boral has significant liquidity and undrawn committed facilities of close to $1.7 billion, up from $1.3 billion a year ago, strengthened by additional and extended debt financing facilities. Net debt of $2.2 billion was relatively stable.

“Safety performance was steady with a recordable injury frequency rate of 7.6. With a goal to deliver Zero Harm Today, we are preparing to roll out a refreshed safety program to deliver another step-change improvement in safety outcomes.”

Commenting on the year ahead for FY2021, Todorcevski said: “The business environment remains uncertain including continued disruptions due to COVID-19.

“We have started FY2021 with lower revenues but only slightly lower earnings relative to the same time last year. Overall, EBITDA margins in July recovered relative to 2HFY2020 and were broadly in line with 1HFY2020.

“We are experiencing less disruptions in most businesses, providing an opportunity for improved outcomes, however, there is potential for further disruptions and uncertainty remains. For example, it is unclear how long stage 4 lockdowns in Melbourne will continue. At this stage of the lockdown, concrete volumes in our Melbourne metro business are down ~20% relative to last year.

“In the USA, we are seeing a pleasing start to the year, with evidence of demand strengthening and July sales volumes improving relative to recent months. However, sales are still down year on year and there is considerable uncertainty around the economic recovery and the ongoing disruptions associated with COVID-19, including a high level of absenteeism in a number of businesses and the industry more broadly, which is impacting operations and lead times.

“We are focused on maintaining a safe and careful response to ongoing COVID-19 developments. We are positioned to flex production levels to align with demand and avoid unintended inventory builds while ensuring we are able to support our customers.

“Our current focus is on recovering and strengthening margins, delivering strong cash flows, and realising benefits from divisional improvement initiatives.

“We are currently completing a review of Boral’s portfolio of businesses to assess the market outlook, competitive position and earnings potential of each business. I expect to announce in late October the outcomes of the review, as well as our future operating model and target capital structure, which will help to set future priorities and define the direction for longer-term value creation.”

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