Hayleys
9-month turnover up 23% to Rs 17.2 billion
The Hayleys Group has given shareholders an indication that dividends
for the financial year ending March 31, 2006 are likely to be on
par with those of the previous year, despite performance in two
business sectors that continue to be adversely affected by external
factors.
The
conglomerate's nine month results released to the Colombo Stock
Exchange last week indicate that sectors such as Transportation,
Agri Inputs, Industry Inputs and Consumer Products have continued
to perform strongly in the third quarter, in contrast to the Group's
Fibre and Activated Carbon operations.
Group
turnover for the nine months ending December 31, 2005 was up 23
percent to Rs 17.2 billion, on the back of strong turnover growth
in Transportation (up 83 per cent), Agri inputs (up 38 per cent),
Industry Inputs (up 110 per cent), Consumer Products (up 29 per
cent) and Hand Protection (up 23 per cent), the Group said in a
statement. Income from associates grew 7 percent to Rs 193 million
for the nine months reviewed, with associate companies Hayleys MGT
Knitting Mills and DIMO reporting strong results and making substantial
contributions to profit.
In
a note to shareholders, Hayleys Chairman Rajan Yatawara said: "We
expectthe final quarter's result to reflect an improvement on the
performance thus far achieved during the year, but the whole year
performance is likely to be lower than in the last year."
He
explained that "the strength of the Rupee vis-à-vis
local inflation continues to be a major factor impeding achievement
of the results targeted." Continued raw material shortages
as a result of a shortfall in national coconut production in the
first nine months of the year have also affected the bottomline
of the Group's fibre products and activated carbon exports.
As
a result of these factors, pre tax profit for the period under review
at Rs 1.0 billion was down 21 per cent, while profit after tax and
minority interest was down 33 per cent to Rs 386 million.
Elaborating
on the external factors that impacted on the Group's bottomline,
Yatawara said: "While the coconut crop improved during the
quarter, desiccated coconut mills operated at sub-optimal capacity
and there was little activity in copra. This restricted shell availability,
and thus charcoal supplies. Husks were less affected, but rains
affected the drying of fibre. The ongoing establishment of offshore
production centres will help insulate us against such vagaries in
the future."
Yatawara
has acknowledged that the Group is acutely mindful that its likely
annual result will fall short of what had been projected at the
beginning of the year.
Noting
that"shareholders may be anxious that dividends for the year
will be lower than in the previous year," he has however assured
them that this should not be so. Dividend payment for 2004-05 was
35 per cent.
|