Trustpower first-half profit, ex-Tilt, falls 7.6%
Monday 07 November 2016 10:55 AM
Trustpower first-half profit, ex-Tilt, falls 7.6% on increased operating expenses, demerger costs
By Jonathan Underhill
Nov. 7 (BusinessDesk) - Trustpower, which spun out its Australian windfarms into a separately listed company, Tilt Renewables, on Oct. 31, posted a 7.6 percent decline in first-half profit on a demerged basis, in the face of rising operating expenses and costs related to the split.
Profit was $45 million in the six months ended Sept. 30, from $48.7 million a year earlier, the Tauranga-based company said in a statement. Revenue climbed to $501.6 million from $474.8 million.
The demerger created a separate company in Tilt that was valued at about $657 million, based on the value of its shares on the NZX and ASX, which were distributed to existing shareholders. Based on figured adjusted for the split, Trustpower's operating expenses rose to $392 million from $354 million a year earlier, driven by increases in line costs, generation production costs, wages and 'other expenses'. Earnings included $8.7 million of demerger expenses and one-time costs associated with the closure of the company's Energy Direct brand, it said today.
"Margins have been maintained in challenging market conditions, and underlying earnings have remained stable," said chairman Paul Ridley-Smith. "Management has also ensured the company was well prepared for the demerger; a highly important strategic initiative which was implemented just a few days ago.”
Trustpower shares were unchanged at $4.79. The company declared an interim dividend of 16 cents a share, payable on Dec. 9, from 21 cents a year earlier when the company included its Australian windfarms.
The company's retail business, which sells electricity, gas, broadband and telephony services to households and businesses in New Zealand, posted first-half revenue of $465 million from a restated $449 million a year earlier. the gains were driven by increased a 1.5 percent gain in electricity revenue to $414 million and a 48 percent jump in telco revenue to $31 million. Gas sales fell to $16.8 million from $17.8 million.
Its generation business in New Zealand, which amounts to 634 megawatts of hydro and wind generation assets, along with metering and irrigation assets, and energy trading, reported sales in the first half of $149 million, up from a restated $139 million as electricity revenue climbed to $134 million from $127 million, making up for a drop in meter rental revenue to $8.5 million from $9.4 million.
The company also has a controlling 65 percent interest in King Country Energy, which it acquired in March, which has 54MW of hydro generation. King Country contributed earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, amortisation and financial adjustments of $7.1 million in the first half, with sales of 113 GWh to its 17,000 retail customers.
Its Australian generation assets, made up of 477MW of hydro and wind generation, reported revenue of $77.7 million from a restated $64.8 million a year earlier. Expenses rose to $20.7 million from $17.6 million, while ebitdaf jumped about 21 percent to $57 million.
The average spot price for generation in New Zealand was $55/MWh, from $54/MWh a year earlier.
(BusinessDesk)
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