Comvita — Update 15 May 2016

Comvita — Update 15 May 2016

Comvita

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Comvita

From the hive to the shelf

Full year results

Food & beverages

16 May 2016

Price

NZ$12.20

Market cap

NZ$487m

NZ$/A$0.9026

Net debt (NZ$m) at 31 March 2016

58.7

Shares in issue

39.9m

Free float

83.4%

Code

CVT

Primary exchange

NZX

Secondary exchange

N/A

Share price performance

%

1m

3m

12m

Abs

0.8

37.9

190.6

Rel (local)

(2.0)

20.1

152.9

52-week high/low

NZ$12.40

NZ$4.10

Business description

Comvita (CVT) is a manufacturer and marketer of honey-based products, fresh olive leaf extract products, fish oil products and other related health products. The products are used for health, skin care and medical uses. Approximately 80% of its products are exported.

Next events

Full year results (15 months)

August 2016

Analysts

Moira Daw

+61 (0)2 9258 1161

Finola Burke

+61 (0)2 9258 1161

Comvita is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

Comvita (CVT) has put the building blocks in place to grow sales to more than NZ$400m within five years (we are estimating FY20 sales of NZ$440m) and at the same time improve margins and ROCE. In the last three years CVT’s sales have almost doubled and the operational leverage has seen operating profit treble in the same time frame. In FY16 EPS increased by 45%, dividends were up 23% and ROCE improved from 12% to 15.3%.

Year end

Revenue (NZm)

PBT*
(NZm)

EPS*
(c)

DPS
(c)

P/E
(x)

Yield
(%)

03/15

152.7

16.3

29.9

13.0

40.8

1.1

03/16

202.2

28.4

47.7

16.0

25.6

1.3

06/16e**

212.2

28.8

48.8

18.0

25.0

1.5

06/17e

242.1

37.4

64.7

25.0

18.9

2.0

06/18e

294.7

48.2

83.0

31.0

14.7

2.5

Note: *PBT and EPS are normalised, excluding amortisation of acquired intangibles, exceptional items and share-based payments. Note: **The year end will change from 31 March to 30 June from 2016. 06/16e is a 15-month period.

Highlights: 12 months to 31 March 2016

FY16 sales of NZ$202.2m were 2.3% less than our forecasts (FY15 up 32%). FY16 EBITDA of NZ$36.4m was up 59% (35% in FY15). FY16 NPAT of NZ$17.2m was up 68% (28% in FY15). FY16 reported EPS of NZ$0.43 was up 45% (14% in FY15). Shareholders have been rewarded with a 23% increase in dividends and a final dividend is expected to be paid for the period ending 30 June 2016.

Product demand remains high

The market for Manuka honey is supply constrained. Therefore, securing supply of raw material is the key imperative. CVT has continued to increase its debt-funded raw material supply. In our view, its joint venture with Capilano (CCZ.ASX) is an important strategic move (see our 2 March 2016 Flash note). CVT and CCZ will work to secure supply of more medicinal-grade honey from Australia. CVT also plans to develop olive tree plantations in Australia to meet the increasing demand for its olive leaf products. Recent trials show that olive leaf extract can reduce blood pressure and cholesterol levels. Management does not expect the capital cost of developing olive trees to be material and our forecasts show debt continuing to reduce from the FY16 peak of NZ$58.7m. CVT also plans to develop and distribute fish oil products sourced from SeaDragon (SEA.NZX), in which CVT has a strategic investment.

Valuation: DCF plus Derma Sciences NZ$13.19

CVT’s share price has increased by 204% in the last 12 months as the company beat expectations and awareness of the potential for health-related products in Asian markets increased. Our revised DCF is NZ$13.08 and adding the current market value of CVT’s investment in Derma Sciences’ (DSCI.NASDAQ) shares values CVT at NZ$13.19 per share (previously NZ$9.20). This value results in multiples ahead of the peer group with FY17e EV/EBIT multiples at 13.9x (at DCF 16.3x) and peer group at 13.8x. However, our forecasts reflect superior growth in EPS and ROCE.

Unaudited results: 12 months to 31 March 2016

The results for the 12 months to 31 March 2016 are unaudited because CVT is changing its year end from 31 March to 30 June to reduce the disparity in the half year performance. Audited accounts will be released in August 2016 for the 15 months ended 30 June 2016. Management advised that the results for the 15 months ending 30 June 2016 will be similar to the results for the 12-month period ended 31 March 2016 because the June quarter is the quietest one due to seasonal factors. CVT has released a select set of unaudited data, as detailed in Exhibit 1 below.

Exhibit 1: Unaudited data released for year ended 31 March 2016

NZ$’000

2016

2015

Variance

Revenue

202.2

152.7

32.4%

EBITDA

36.4

23.0

58.7%

NPAT

17.2

10.2

67.9%

EPS- reported (cents per share)

43.4

29.9

45.1%

Dividends (cents per share)

16.0

13.0

23.1%

ROCE

15.3%

12.0%

27.5%

Balance sheet data

Total Assets

231.6

199.7

15.9%

Raw material inventory

53.6

27.7

93.5%

Net debt

58.7

26.1

124.9%

Net debt to equity ratio

45.4%

22.0%

23.4%

Weighted average shares

39.7

34.3

15.7%

Revenue per product

Growth

Healthcare

48.5

43.7

11.0%

Functional foods

135.4

98.5

37.6%

Personal care

6.1

4.2

44.4%

Medical

12.1

6.4

91.0%

Total Revenue

202.2

152.7

32.4%

Revenue per country

Growth

Medical

9.3

5.9

57.6%

Europe

8.9

9.5

-6.3%

Asia

64.9

46.9

38.4%

Australia

64.8

40.1

61.6%

NZ

46.3

46.5

-0.4%

Other (no data provided for FY16)

7.96

3.8

109.3%

Total Revenue

202.2

152.7

32.4%

Source: Comvita data

Key messages from results

CVT reported unaudited NPAT for the 12 months ended 31 March 2016 of NZ$17.2m, which was 1.2% above the top of the November 2015 NPAT guidance range of NZ$15-17m. FY16 NPAT was up 68% on FY15. Revenue for the 12-month results to 31 March 2016 was 2.3% below our forecasts; EBITDA was 11.7% ahead of our forecasts. Highlights of the results included:

a 94% increase in the value of raw material inventory held from NZ$27.7m at 31 March 2015 and NZ$42m at 31 September 2015 to NZ$53.6m at 31 March 2016 (note the price paid to beekeepers for bulk Manuka honey increased from NZ$8-85/kg in 2014 to NZ$9-116.5/kg in 2015); in a supply-constrained market it is necessary to acquire inventories of raw material to underpin sales growth;

sales growth of 32% converted to EBITDA growth of 59% due to an improvement in EBITDA margin from 15% to 18%; the improvement in converting sales growth to profitable growth is illustrated by a comparison with 2015, when sales grew by the same amount as in 2016 (32% pa), but EBITDA only grew by 35%;

sales growth in Australia of 61.6% due in part to demand from health-conscious Asian customers, both local residents and those visiting Australia (3.388 million visitors from Asia to Australia in FY15);1

www. tourism.australia.com/statistics.

growth in sales from some of the smaller markets, for example Japan grew by 64% and US sales increased by 66%;2

Management discussion, Comvita 10 May 2016.

NZ year-on-year sales were flat because, in line with the company strategy, CVT withdrew some of its products from the supermarket chains (see impact on sales growth and margin shown in Exhibit 2); sales were made through other higher-margin channels including CVT’s retail stores. CVT reported that its Auckland airport store had performed well, thanks to the influx of visitors from China (355,904 arrivals in FY15, up 34.4%3);

Statistics New Zealand.

EPS growth of 45% and an increase in dividends of 23%;

an undertaking to pay a final dividend for the three-month ‘change of financial year’ period to 30 June 2016;

management advised that the DSCI 3.3% shareholding would suffer a reduction in fair value, which would be offset by the inclusion of an uplift from ‘in the money’ options held in SeaDragon. No details have been provided; and

a 28% increase in ROCE from 12% to 15.3% (see Exhibit 4).

The half-yearly comparison table shows the impact of the strategy to reduce sales in New Zealand and sell through higher-margin channels. The rate of sales growth in H216 is the same as H215, but the EBITDA margin for FY16 of 18% is 300bp more than FY15.

Exhibit 2: Comparison half year results

NZ$m

H115

H215

FY15

H116

H216

FY16

Revenue

59.7

93.0

152.7

91.1

111.1

202.0

Depn & amort (estimated allocation)

(2.8)

(2.8)

3.3

3.3

Results Operations

(1.7)

N/P

5.8

N/P

EBITDA

(4.4)

27.2

23.0

9.1

27.3

36.4

EBITDA margin

N/A

29.3%

15.0%

10.0%

24.6%

18.0%

Inc in Revenue

52.6%

19.4%

32.3%

Inc in EBITDA

N/M

0.2%

58.7%

Source: Comvita data

CVT did not release details of operating cash flow for the year. However, as set out in the following table we calculate the operating cash flow (negative) for the year as around -NZ$4.4m. The negative cash flow is due in the main to the NZ$25.9m investment in inventory. (H116 gross operating cash flow was -NZ$22.9m.)

Exhibit 3: Estimated operating cash flow y/e 31 March 2016

NZ$m

2016

EBITDA

36.4

Changes in:

Raw material inventory

(25.9)

Accs receivable

(5.1)

Accs payable

(7.4)

Finished goods inventory reduction

(2.4)

Operating cash flow

(4.4)

NZ$m

EBITDA

Changes in:

Raw material inventory

Accs receivable

Accs payable

Finished goods inventory reduction

Operating cash flow

2016

36.4

(25.9)

(5.1)

(7.4)

(2.4)

(4.4)

Source: Edison Investment Research, Comvita data

Improving ROCE

After a period of suboptimal returns in FY15, CVT achieved a ROCE of 12%, which was in excess of its cost of capital (we estimate WACC at 10.7%). In FY16 sales growth and improved margins saw ROCE reach 15.3%. Our forecasts show continued improvement in ROCE as CVT continues to achieve strong sales growth (we are forecasting CAGR in revenue from 2016 to 2026 of 12.6% pa) and improving EBITDA margins (~20%) with a low level of sustaining capital expenditure.

ROCE history and our forecasts for expected future ROCE are set in Exhibit 4 below.

Exhibit 4: ROCE

Source: Comvita data (reported), Edison Investment Research (forecasts). Note: FY16 is the 12 months ended 31 March 2016, FY17-20e is for years ending 30 June.

Increased raw honey inventory levels are a positive

Manuka honey is a product that is supply constrained, therefore securing inventory to fulfil demand is a key sales driver. Production of Manuka honey is constrained by the plantings of Leptospermum scoparium (also referred to as tea tree), which typically grows in the drier east coasts of the North Island and the South Island of New Zealand, and in Australia in Tasmania, Victoria and New South Wales. The tea trees that produce the highest-quality Manuka honey typically grow in the wild in low-nutrient soils where there is abundant water supply. Tea trees are relatively fast growing and take about five years to maturity. Investment in tea tree plantings in Australia and New Zealand is continuing, but at this stage the rate of development is lagging demand. Production of honey, as with most agricultural products is affected by weather conditions during the crucial Christmas flowering period. Raw material inventory at 31 March 2014 was NZ$14.7m compared with raw material inventory as at 31 March 2016 of NZ$53.6m.

CVT has put in place a number of initiatives to secure the supply of Manuka honey, which is a strategic imperative for the company:

The acquisition of growers’ co-operative New Zealand Honey (July 2014).

Incentivising contracted apiarists through a share ownership scheme whereby shares are issued in exchange for long-term supply contracts.

Joint venture with East Taupo Lands Trust to undertake the development of hives and training of beekeepers.

Continued investment in CVT’s apiary business Kiwi Bee, which is responsible for supplying CVT with about 50% of its raw honey supply.

Delivering on the strategy

CVT believes that one of its key competitive advantages is the investment it has made in the whole value chain, from owning and developing apiaries to product development and manufacture, to distribution through both wholesale chains and its own retail stores. CVT controls the value chain from hive to shelf. It sources raw material from its own and contracted apiaries in New Zealand and its olive tree plantations in Australia, as well as partnering with long-term trusted suppliers for the supply of raw materials.

CVT’s strategic review focused on five key platforms. Progress on the strategy to date is set out below:

Increasing profitability faster than sales: this was achieved in the year ended 31 March 2016 when EBITDA grew almost twice as fast as revenue and the incremental EBITDA margin reached 27.2%.

Supply chain strategies including investments in apiaries and in increased raw material inventory: raw material inventory increased by NZ$25.9m and during the year CVT invested in SeaDragon, a supplier of fish oils and formed a joint venture with Capilano to jointly explore opportunities to secure medicinal honey supplies, as well as co-operating on product development and marketing initiatives.

Optimising ingredient, market and channel performance: management advised that recent changes to the Hong Kong management team are bearing fruit.

An increase in marketing spend to grow added-value product lines: details of marketing expenditure have not been released for the full year. However, H116 showed an increase in selling and marketing expenses from NZ$4.8m to NZ$20.8m.

An acquisition focus that is earnings per share accretive; no acquisitions were made in FY16 but in management’s view, the joint venture formed with Capilano is likely to help ensure that acquisitions are fairly priced.

Margin improvement

In our view CVT is able to increase margins through:

operational leverage;

the use of its brand power to increase prices;

optimising its distribution channels and selling through channels that offer the highest margin; and

developing products that use smaller quantities of Manuka honey, but still meet the needs of the market.

Forecast changes

We have used the limited unaudited data provided for the year ended 31 March 2016 to revise our forecasts for the 15-month period to 30 June 2016 and subsequent years. The company has indicated a flat three months to complete the 15-month period to June 2016, reflecting the customary quiet June quarter. However, the strong sales and margin improvement for the 12 months ended 31 March 2016 have resulted in the following key changes to our forecasts for FY17 and FY18:

EBITDA margins have been increased from 15.9% in FY17 and 16.1% in FY18 to 18.3% and 18.7% respectively.

Sales growth beyond 2020 has been increased. We are assuming a CAGR from 2020 to 2026 of 8.0% (previously 4.6%); our terminal growth rate applied to net cash flows remains unchanged at 2%.

A dividend payout ratio of ~40% has been maintained, resulting in a lift in dividends.

Our assumptions relating to inventory show that inventory as a percentage of cost of goods sold reduces from 66% at 30 June 2016 to 60.7% in FY17 and 60.5% in FY18. The reduction in inventory levels of raw material and finished goods reflects the competition for raw materials. For the 12 months to 31 March 2016, we have assumed inventory levels as reported for raw material of NZ$53.7m plus an estimate for work in progress and finished goods inventory of NZ$14.7m. This equates to 71.8% of cost of goods sold compared with 49.4% in FY14 and 54.8% in FY15.

In the table below the decrease in dividend of 11.1% for the year to 31 March 2016 has been impacted by the change of year end. Management announced that a final dividend will be paid for the period to 30 June 2016. Details of our forecast changes are shown in Exhibit 5 below.

Exhibit 5: Forecast changes

FY16*

FY16e

FY17e

FY18e

Forecast

Actual

Variance

Old

New

Change (%)

Old

New

Change (%)

Old

New

Change (%)

Revenue

206.9

202.2

(2.3%)

237.0

212.2

(10.5%)

247.3

242.1

(2.1%)

298.9

294.7

(1.4%)

EBITDA

32.6

36.4

11.7%

37.3

37.0

(0.9%)

39.4

44.4

12.6%

48.3

55.1

14.2%

EBITA

28.2

30.3

7.8%

32.1

31.8

(1.0%)

35.4

40.4

14.0%

44.3

51.1

15.4%

Amortisation

(1.7)

(1.7)

(0.0%)

(2.0)

(2.0)

0.0%

(1.1)

(1.1)

0.0%

(1.0)

(1.0)

0.0%

Interest

(2.1)

(2.1)

0.0%

(2.6)

(3.0)

15.3%

(2.5)

(3.0)

15.9%

(2.5)

(2.9)

15.4%

NPBT (norm)

26.1

28.4

8.8%

29.5

28.8

(2.4%)

32.9

37.4

13.9%

41.8

48.2

15.4%

NPAT (norm)

17.9

18.9

6.0%

20.7

19.4

(6.3%)

22.7

25.8

13.7%

28.7

33.1

15.3%

NPAT (reported)

16.1

17.2

6.6%

18.7

17.4

(7.0%)

21.6

24.7

14.4%

27.7

32.1

15.8%

EPS (norm)

45.2

47.7

5.6%

52.3

48.8

(6.6%)

57.5

64.7

12.5%

72.7

83.0

14.1%

EPS (reported)

40.8

43.4

6.3%

47.3

43.8

(7.4%)

54.6

61.9

13.4%

70.2

80.5

14.7%

DPS

18.0

16.0

(11.1%)

18.0

18.0

0.0%

23.0

25.0

8.7%

28.0

31.0

10.7%

Revenue growth

35.5%

27.3%

(8.1%)

49.3%

33.6%

(15.6%)

4.4%

14.1%

9.7%

20.9%

21.7%

0.9%

EBITDA margin %

15.8%

18.0%

2.3%

15.8%

17.4%

1.7%

15.9%

18.3%

2.4%

16.1%

18.7%

2.6%

Source: Comvita data, Edison Investment Research. Note: *FY16 is for the 12 months ended 31 March 2016. FY16e is for the 15-month period ending 30 June 2016. FY17 and FY18 are for the years ending 30 June.

Valuation

Derma Sciences shareholding

CVT holds 864,880 shares (3.3%) in Derma Sciences. The financial statements at 30 September 2015 show the value of this shareholding at NZ$8.152m. At 10 May 2016, DSCI’s share price was US$3.29 (NZ$4.88 using an exchange rate of US$/NZ$1.48), a total value of NZ$4.221m, or NZ$0.106 per CVT share. The net change in fair value of available-for-sale assets was NZ$4.3m in H116, and we estimate that there will be a further downward adjustment of NZ$4.3m in H216, calculated as shown in Exhibit 6 below.

Exhibit 6: Derma Sciences – estimated impairment charge for H216

No of shares

864,880

Share price (US$)

31-Mar-16

$3.10

US/NZ$ exchange rate

1.4448

Share price (NZ$)

31-Mar-16

$4.48

Valuation (NZ$m)

31-Mar-16

3.9

Book value (NZ$m)

30-Sep-15

8.2

Impairment charge (NZ$m)

(4.3)

Source: Comvita, Edison Investment Research

DCF

Our DCF valuation of NZ$13.08 uses a WACC of 10.7% and a terminal growth rate of 2%. The terminal value accounts for 54% of the DCF valuation.

Our previous DCF valuation was NZ$9.20. The 42% increase in our DCF is due to increased EBITDA margins and an expectation of strong growth continuing past FY20 (CAGR to 2026 of 8%) when our forecasts assume that CVT will beat its five-year revenue goal of NZ$400m by 10%.

Exhibit 7: Discounted cash flow valuation

NZ$m

Sum of PV

264.5

Terminal value

971.5

Discount factor

0.326

PV of terminal value

316.3

PV of enterprise

580.8

Debt (at 31 March 2016)

58.7

Net value for shareholder

522.1

Number of shares on issue (m)

39.9

NPV

$13.08

Source: Edison Investment Research

Comparative companies

There are three companies in our peer group:

Capilano Honey (CZZ) is an Australia-based honey packager selling ~80% of its product through large supermarket chains in Australia. It sources all its honey supply from third parties and achieves lower margins than CVT (forecast EBITDA margin for FY16 of 11.8%4 compared with CVT EBITDA margin for FY16 of 18%) because its product is positioned at the commodity end rather than the premium end of the product range. CVT has a marketing and product development joint venture with Capilano.

Bloomberg, 10 May 2016.

Blackmores (BKL.ASX) is an Australia-based supplier of vitamins, minerals and supplements. Its product range is more extensive than CVT’s, but targets similar markets and, like CVT, it sees substantial growth opportunities in China. The recent announcement by the Chinese government of an 11.9% tax on complimentary health product goods bought on foreign websites has seen BKL’s shares retreat from a high of A$220 per share to the current price of A$183 per share. CVT’s products are not affected because they are classified as food rather than complimentary health products.

Vitaco Holdings (VIT.ASX) is a recently listed vitamins, minerals and supplements business with exposure to Asian markets.

We have included the vitamin, minerals and supplements companies because they address the same markets with a comparable product range, albeit that the peers’ product range is more extensive than CVT’s, which is largely focused around products using Manuka honey, olive leaf and fish oil. We understand that CVT plans to add more clean, green, healthy products to its range. Both Blackmores and Vitaco see Asian markets as key growth drivers. CVT has been operating in Asia for 10 years and has built both brand and distribution capability in key Asian markets.

CVT’s recent re-rating by the market and BKL’s recent share price decline mean that CVT is now trading at a premium to its peers on all earnings-based measures. In our view, the premium is justified by CVT’s superior growth rate and the expected strong growth in ROCE. Our forecasts show CVT’s ROCE increasing from 15.3% in FY16 to 26.8% in FY18. In our view, compared with BKL and CZZ where ROCE is projected to be flat, CVT is at an earlier stage of its development and investors are therefore likely to be prepared to pay more for its superior growth prospects.

CVT is trading on a FY17 price-to-growth (PEG) ratio of 0.57 compared with the peer group’s FY17 PEG of 0.80. If we apply our DCF valuation to CVT plus the value of the Derma Sciences investment, the CVT PEG ratio for FY17 becomes 0.61.

Exhibit 8: Comparative companies

P/E (x)

EVEBIT (x)

Yield (%)

ROE (%)

$

Market cap (m)

FY16e

FY17e

FY18e

FY16e

FY17e

FY18e

FY16e

FY17e

FY18e

FY16e

FY17e

FY18e

Blackmore

A$

3,152

31.9

25.3

21.3

22.1

17.5

14.1

2.4

3.1

3.6

63.4

63.1

61.1

Capilano

A$

188

18.3

15.9

13.5

13.5

11.9

10.1

2.5

2.9

3.1

27.7

27.5

26.1

Vitaco

A$

255

18.9

16.0

13.2

14.5

12.0

9.9

2.5

2.9

3.1

9.9

11.4

13.1

Peer group average

23.0

19.1

16.0

16.7

13.8

11.4

2.5

2.9

3.3

33.7

34.0

33.4

Comvita - current

NZ$

487

28.1*

19.7

15.2

19.1

13.9

10.9

1.5

2.0

2.5

15.3

21.2

26.8

Comvita - DCF

NZ$

581

45.7

33.3

26.1

22.3

16.3

12.8

1.4

1.9

2.4

Source: Bloomberg 10 May 2016, Edison Investment Research for Comvita. Note:*FY16 for CVT is based on unaudited results for 12 months ended 31 March 2016. Note: EPS for CVT used in P/E calculation is based on reported earnings, not normalised earnings, to make comparisons meaningful.

Exhibit 9: Financial summary

NZ$000s

2014

2015

2016

2016e

2017e

2018e

31 March/30 June

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

PROFIT & LOSS

31-Mar

31-Mar

31-Mar

30-Jun

30-Jun

30-Jun

Revenue

 

 

115,283

152,702

202,155

212,155

242,065

294,698

Cost of Sales

(54,924)

(81,150)

(104,976)

(110,169)

(126,200)

(153,217)

Gross Profit

60,359

71,552

97,179

101,986

115,865

141,481

EBITDA

 

 

15,785

22,804

36,416

37,000

44,356

55,098

Operating Profit (before amort. and except.)

 

 

13,192

19,934

30,348

31,800

40,399

51,111

Intangible Amortisation

(1,527)

(1,777)

(1,735)

(2,000)

(1,119)

(989)

Exceptionals

0

0

0

0

0

Other

0

0

0

0

0

Operating Profit

11,665

18,157

28,613

29,800

39,279

50,122

Net Interest

(564)

(3,668)

(2,059)

(2,968)

(2,954)

(2,880)

Profit Before Tax (norm)

 

 

12,628

16,266

28,397

28,832

37,445

48,232

Profit Before Tax (FRS 3)

 

 

11,101

14,489

26,662

26,832

36,325

47,242

Tax

(3,129)

(4,245)

(9,458)

(9,458)

(11,624)

(15,118)

Profit After Tax (norm)

9,499

12,021

18,939

19,374

25,821

33,114

Profit After Tax (FRS 3)

7,972

10,244

17,204

17,374

24,701

32,125

Average Number of Shares Outstanding (m)

31.3

34.6

39.7

39.7

39.9

39.9

EPS - normalised (c)

 

 

25.5

29.9

47.7

48.8

64.7

83.0

EPS - (IFRS) (c )

 

 

25.5

29.6

43.4

43.8

61.9

80.5

Dividend per share (c)

12.0

13.0

16.0

18.0

25.0

31.0

Gross Margin (%)

52.4

46.9

48.1

48.1

47.9

48.0

EBITDA Margin (%)

13.7

14.9

18.0

17.4

18.3

18.7

Operating Margin (before GW and except.) (%)

11.4

13.1

15.0

15.0

16.7

17.3

BALANCE SHEET

Fixed Assets

 

 

93,277

106,615

107,549

106,674

109,294

111,478

Intangible Assets

40,558

43,112

44,114

40,996

42,995

42,006

Tangible Assets

39,174

48,417

52,083

50,592

53,655

55,405

Investments

13,545

15,086

11,352

15,086

12,644

14,067

Current Assets

 

 

55,469

93,107

118,952

126,693

137,549

159,655

Stocks

27,156

44,519

75,453

73,000

76,608

92,692

Debtors

22,362

28,895

33,950

34,000

40,679

49,523

Cash

2,865

19,420

8,621

19,420

19,333

16,510

Other

3,086

273

929

273

929

929

Current Liabilities

 

 

(21,276)

(32,418)

(25,028)

(30,030)

(30,646)

(35,184)

Creditors

(20,721)

(30,388)

(22,998)

(28,000)

(28,616)

(33,154)

Short term borrowings

(555)

(2,030)

(2,030)

(2,030)

(2,030)

(2,030)

Long Term Liabilities

 

 

(35,388)

(48,625)

(69,322)

(76,298)

(69,322)

(69,322)

Long term borrowings

(28,800)

(43,483)

(65,283)

(71,156)

(65,283)

(65,283)

Other long term liabilities

(6,588)

(5,142)

(4,039)

(5,142)

(4,039)

(4,039)

Net Assets

 

 

92,082

118,679

132,151

127,039

146,875

166,627

CASH FLOW

Operating Cash Flow

 

 

11,347

19,409

(4,384)

1,026

37,163

34,707

Net Interest

(1,774)

(2,926)

(3,102)

(2,968)

(2,954)

(2,880)

Tax

(1,052)

(4,513)

(10,271)

(9,458)

(11,624)

(15,118)

Capex

(11,301)

(8,897)

(7,375)

(7,375)

(6,821)

(7,159)

Acquisitions/disposals

(5,024)

(23,557)

116

116

0

0

Financing

9,454

24,723

(552)

(552)

0

0

Dividends

(3,983)

(3,976)

(7,664)

(8,462)

(9,978)

(12,373)

Net Cash Flow

(2,333)

263

(33,232)

(27,673)

5,786

(2,823)

Opening net debt/(cash)

 

 

24,157

26,490

26,093

26,093

53,766

47,980

HP finance leases initiated

0

0

0

0

0

0

Other

0

134

633

0

0

0

Closing net debt/(cash)

 

 

26,490

26,093

58,692

53,766

47,980

50,803

Source: Comvita data, Edison Investment Research. Note: The period ending 30 June 2016 is for 15 months due to a change in the financial year end. The unaudited accounts for the 12 months to 31 March 2016 (released on 10 May 2016) do not show a full set of financial information (refer to Exhibit 1 and FY16 numbers shown in bold).

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Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

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United Kingdom

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Research: Industrials

Tyman — Update 13 May 2016

Tyman

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