EABL 2019 East HALF-YEAR African breweries RESULTS ltd FULL YEAR results presentation

Similar documents
CELEBRATING LIFE, EVERY DAY, EVERYWHERE FULL YEAR RESULTS 2017 YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 2016

EABL F14 Full Year Results Media Briefing. 7 th August 2014

Making a strong business stronger

EABL F12 Full Year Results Investor Briefing

Interim Results. Six months ended 31 December 2012

PRELIMINARY RESULTS YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2014

DIAGEO INTERIM RESULTS SIX MONTHS ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2017

Interim Results. Six months ended 31 December 2013

EABL F08 Investor Group Briefing

EAST AFRICAN BREWERIES LIMITED. F 11 Full Year Results. Investor Briefing. Group Managing Director & CEO. 26 th August 2011

Brown-Forman s 2Q17 and 1H17 Results December 7, 2016

Financial Review. Volume (case equivalents) 8.4m 8.2m 2% Core revenue 706.7m 663.1m 7% Brand investment expenditure 125.7m 120.

Fourth Quarter 2014 Earnings Call. February 10, 2015

East African Breweries Limited

2015 CAGNY. Muhtar Kent, Chairman & CEO Kathy Waller, EVP & Chief Financial Officer FEBRUARY 20, 2015

FY18 Results & June 6, FY19 Outlook

DIAGEO LAC PRESIDENT S CALL 16 MAY 2018

SABMiller plc. Interim results Half year ended 30 September November 2005 also available on website

Thai Beverage PLC. FY2015 Financial Results

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

Reasons to Believe IR OVERVIEW 2014

SABMiller plc. Full year results Twelve months ended 31 March Graham Mackay, Chief Executive Jamie Wilson, Chief Financial Officer.

SABMiller plc. Full year results Twelve months ended 31 March Jamie Wilson, Chief Financial Officer Gary Leibowitz, SVP, Investor Relations

SABMiller plc. F 12 first half results US call Six months ended September 30, November 17, 2011

PepsiCo Reports First Quarter 2016 Results and Reaffirms Full Year Outlook

Guinness Nigeria PLC H1 F 13 Performance Investor Briefing

TRADING STATEMENT. Q November 2018

Thai Beverage PLC. 1Q2015 Financial Results

James Quincey President and Chief Operating Officer CAGNY. Feb 23, Kathy Waller EVP and Chief Financial Officer

Principal risks and uncertainties

2016 Brown-Forman Investor Day Jay Koval, VP Investor & Community Relations

Third Quarter 2015 Earnings Call. October 21, 2015

Q Conference Call. November 2, 2018

Unlocking Our Full Potential

Investor Presentation

PepsiCo Reports First Quarter 2018 Results; Reaffirms 2018 Financial Targets

Shaping our future. René Hooft Graafland. Member of the Executive Board/ CFO

IFF Q Earnings Conference Call

STRENGTHENING OUR SYSTEM FOR ENDURING ADVANTAGE. Brian Smith President, Europe, Middle East & Africa

JOHN F. BROCK CHAIRMAN & CEO NIK JHANGIANI SVP & CFO

Investor Presentation November 2011

John F. Brock CHAIRMAN & CEO. Nik Jhangiani SVP & CFO

McCormick & Company, Inc. Bernstein Strategic Decisions Conference. June 3, 2016

Carlsberg A/S. Interim results H1 2015

Electrical Products Group Conference May 23, Greg Hayes Chairman & CEO

PepsiCo. Presentation to Consumer Analyst Group of New York February 22, 2017

McCormick & Company, Inc. 4th Quarter 2018 Financial Results and 2019 Outlook

Investor Presentation September 2011

Thai Beverage PLC. 1H16 Financial Results

Nampak 2012 Annual Results

RESULTS PRESENTATION. Creating a Future, Enhancing Life

Sanford C. Bernstein. Strategic Decisions Conference, London, 19 September 2012 Carlos Brito, CEO Anheuser-Busch InBev

First Quarter 2018 Financial Review and Analysis (preliminary, unaudited)

Aramark Fourth Quarter & Full Year 2018 Results November 13, 2018

2012 Interim Results - Presentation ZURICH, 23 AUGUST 2012

Investor Presentation

FY 2018 First Quarter Earnings Supplemental Information. August 10, 2017

SABMiller plc. First half results. 19 November Graham Mackay, Chief Executive Malcolm Wyman, CFO. Six months ended 30 September 2009

SABMiller plc. Consumer analyst group of Europe - CAGE. London 29 March 2011

NEWS RELEASE. Deere Announces Third-Quarter Earnings of $642 Million

Forward-Looking Statements

Carlsberg A/S. H interim results

American Express Company

Unilever - CAGE Conference. Paul Polman CEO Roger Seabrook VP Investor Relations London - 19 th March 2012

Delivering Value to Shareholders Interim Results 26 November 2008

NEWS RELEASE. Deere Announces First-Quarter Earnings of $194 Million

Procter and Gamble Earnings Release: Q2 FY 2017 Results January 20, 2017

PepsiCo Second Quarter 2014 Earnings Call July 23, 2014

EARNINGS CALL. FISCAL 2018: Q1 RESULTS September 26, 2017

SABMiller plc today issues its trading update for the 12 months ended 31 March 2016.

Deutsche Bank Global Industrials and Basic Materials Summit June 8, Akhil Johri Executive Vice President, CFO

McCormick & Company, Inc. 2 nd Quarter 2018 Financial Results and Outlook

Vodafone Group Plc Q3 Results. Vittorio Colao, Chief Executive Andy Halford, Chief Financial Officer 3 February 2009

Second Quarter 2018 Earnings. August 7, 2018

M O L S O N C O O R S B R E W I N G C O M PA N Y 2 nd Q U A R T E R E A R N I N G S R E S U LT S A U G U S T 2,

Unilever - Deutsche Bank Conference Graeme Pitkethly / Kees Kruythoff June 14 th 2018

SABMiller plc US annual results presentation Year ended March 31, 2014

Second-Quarter Earnings Review

The Carlsberg Group at a glance

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. Fourth Quarter 2018 Results February 13, 2019

Copyright 2018 CPI Card Group. Fourth Quarter & FY 2017 Earnings Conference Call March 12, 2018

McCormick & Company, Inc. 4th Quarter 2016 Financial Results and Outlook January 25, 2017

Second Quarter 2018 Financial Review and Analysis (preliminary, unaudited)

Preliminary results for the year ended 30 June 2008

Fiscal 2018 Third Quarter Earnings Call January 9, 2019

American Spirit Global Opportunity. Barclay s Back-to-School Consumer Conference Jane Morreau EVP and CFO September 4, 2014

Interim results, six months ended 31 December January 2018

Fourth Quarter 2017 Earnings Release

First Quarter 2013 Results

UNITED TECHNOLOGIES REPORTS SECOND QUARTER 2018 RESULTS RAISES 2018 OUTLOOK

BARNES & NOBLE EDUCATION, INC. 20TH ANNUAL NEEDHAM GROWTH CONFERENCE JANUARY 17, 2018

2017 First Quarter Business Review

Second Quarter 2018 Financial Results. July 31, 2018

GENERAL MEETING 3 MAY Arnaud Lagardère General and Managing Partner

Danske Bank Markets Copenhagen Winter Seminar

2017 THIRD-QUARTER EARNINGS REVIEW October 24, 2017

Felipe Dutra Chief Finance & Technology Officer

Philips Lighting reports 0.5% full year comparable sales growth, 10% operational profitability and EUR 403 million free cash flow

2015 Preliminary Results. 9 March 2016

Amcor & Bemis Combination Creating the Global Leader in Consumer Packaging. 6 August 2018

Transcription:

EABL 2019 East HALF-YEAR African breweries RESULTS ltd FULL YEAR results presentation 1

HALF YEAR RESULTS BRIEFING F19 H1 Commercial Review Andrew Cowan F19 H1 Financial Performance Gyuri Geiszl F19 H2 Priorities Andrew Cowan Q&A 2

F19 HALF YEAR REVIEW Andrew Cowan Group Managing Director

We are clear on our ambition To create the best performing, most trusted and respected consumer products company in Africa Vibrant mainstream beer Explode mainstream spirits Win in premium Viable value recruitments Aspirational and accessible innovations Route to consumer Stakeholder relationships Since 1922 Supply footprint Productivity Our people 4

DOUBLE DIGIT GROWTH FOR TWO CONSECUTIVE HALVES Volume +13% Net sales +13% Gross profit +20% Profit after tax +33% Operating Cash Conversion 118% Interim dividend KES 2.5/share 5

BROAD-BASED GROWTH ACROSS OUR MARKETS Contribution to Overall EABL Net Sales growth (KES) Key Brands KENYA 72% +12% UGANDA 16% +12% TANZANIA 12% +26% Total EABL 100% +13% 6

RECOVERY OF SENATOR KEG AND STRONG GROWTH IN MAINSTREAM SPIRITS Premium Mainstream Value RTD s +3% +17% +16% +1% Beer Spirits Reserve Premium Mainstream Value +54% -3% +29% -2% 7

INNOVATION NSV CONTRIBUTION INCREASED BY 20% KENYA UGANDA TANZANIA +18% +10% +45% 8

Kenya SENATOR KEG AND SPIRITS GROW +12% * DOUBLE DIGIT, BOTTLED BEER FLAT Bottled beer flat despite excise increase Mainstream spirits growing +30% Scotch grew +37% +15% growth in innovation brands Senator +35% growth supported by RTM initiatives Total spirits in +17% growth constrained by uncontrolled imports * Net sales growth

Uganda +12% * PREMIUM BEER AND MAINSTREAM SPIRITS DRIVE GROWTH Tusker Lite and Guinness delivering +21% growth in Premium beer Reserve grew +6% Innovation driven by Uganda Waragi Pineapple Growth in Total Spirits +16% * Net sales growth 10

Tanzania +26%* SERENGETI BECAME LARGEST BRAND IN TANZANIA AFTER GROWING 65% Strong performance of Serengeti Lite Premium Serengeti Lager volumes up Spirits in growth driven launch of Smirnoff X1 11 * Net sales growth

Capital investments in the last 5.5 years to meet increasing Demand CAPEX Disposal 13.0 KES 14bn Kisumu investment 6.8 4.9 5.0 3.7 5.6 2.5 4.8 0.2 0.3 0.9 0.1 FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 HY

PEOPLE Robust Talent Assurance approach with critical roles filled including the new Kisumu brewery. Organizational Efficiency: reducing organisational layers and widening spans for simplified decision making and embedding cost saving culture. Capability: LEAP program ran for all level 4s and above across all functions Culture: Sustained messaging to drive organization purpose and embed execution in the organization as a priority. Focus on Commercial capability through our Diageo Way of Selling

EXCELLENCE AWARDS Alcoholic beverages plant of the year & Sustainability initiative of the year Africa food industry excellence awards Spirits Team, Plant of the Year, Partnership of the Year, President's Team Award, highest percentage NSV growth in F18 Diageo Pride of Africa Awards Winner, Learning and development - Employer of the Year Awards. EABL ranked 6th Overall out of 127 Companies that participated in the Award.

SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY Community Investment initiatives: Murara borehole project in Meru to benefit 10,000 people UBL planted over 40 hectares of trees Serengeti sponsored the national women premier league for a duration of three years Responsible Drinking initiatives: Great impact in the ongoing #UTADO? Programme in Kenya. Aimed at responsible consumption and reducing drunk-driving incidents Opich Pacho sports sponsorship: promoting sports and building relationships in Kisumu County 15

SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY Launch of Research Paper: Titled Sorghum Production In Kenya sharing knowledge and best practices. Project Heshima: Vocational training project had graduation of 285 students from various counties Ongoing stakeholder engagement: Engagements with Government, Private Sector and investors to discuss matters of tax and public policy EABL Board engaged Kisumu governor on the new Kisumu brewery Staff-driven initiatives: Focused on environmental conservation and protect our water towers. 16

Thank You Please hold the questions to the end 17

F19 H1 FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE Gyuri Geiszl Group Finance and Strategy Director 18

Financial Highlights H1 F19 vs LY Volume +13% Net sales KES 41.6bn +13% Operating profit KES 11.4bn +23% Profit after tax KES 6.6bn +33% Operating cash conversion 118% -8ppt Net debt KES 23.7bn +14% Interim dividend KES 2.5/share 19

Strong volume growth across categories H1 F19 KES bn H1 F18 KES bn vs LY Volume growth driven by Senator Keg recovery in Kenya, continued growth of Serengeti in Tanzania, mainstream spirits and innovation across the markets Volume (meu) 7.1 6.3 +13% Gross sales 76.4 68.3 +12% Excise duties (34.8) (31.5) -10% Net sales growth also helped by improved mix in Uganda and Tanzania Net sales 41.6 36.8 +13% 20

Movements in net sales (KES bn) 42 41 0.7 40 1.1 39 1.1 38 1.9 41.6 37 0.0 36 36.8 35 H1 F18 Kenya Bottled Beer Senator Kenya Spirits Tanzania Uganda H1 F19 Recovery of Senator in Kenya in a stable operating environment Uganda delivering strong mix Continued strong performance in Tanzania driven by Serengeti Lite 21

Additional CoGS savings delivered Cost of sales increase +8% behind volume growth +13%, CoGS/case down -5% Also helped by mix: increase in volume of Senator keg H1 F19 KES bn H1 F18 KES bn vs LY Volume (meu) 7.1 6.3 +13% Gross sales 76.4 68.3 +12% Additional productivity savings of KES 1.2bn in cost of sales from: Procurement, local sourcing, lower distribution cost Gross margin improved by +2.7ppt to 46.1% Excise duties (34.8) (31.5) -10% Net sales 41.6 36.8 +13% Cost of sales (22.4) (20.8) -8% Gross profit 19.2 16.0 +20% 22

Re-investment of productivity savings continues H1 F19 KES bn H1 F18 KES bn vs LY Selling and distribution grew by 16% from investing behind our brands to accelerate growth, in line with strategy Administrative costs behind inflation despite investment in additional headcount in sales Stable currencies in the region Gross profit 19.2 16.0 +20% Selling & distribution (3.7) (3.1) -16% Administrative expenses (4.2) (4.0) -4% 11.3 8.8 +29% FX gains, net 0.7 - Gain on sale of land - 0.7 Other charges, net (0.6) (0.3) Operating profit 11.4 9.2 +23% 23

Lower net borrowings and interest charge Strong cash delivery offsets impact of higher capital expenditure, net borrowings down +14% Net finance charges also reduced due to lower interest rates and capitalisation of interest on Kisumu loan Long-term loan from Diageo repaid and refinanced locally in KES Net borrowings Finance costs, net H1 F19 KES bn FY F18 KES bn vs LY (23.7) (27.5) +14% H1 F19 KES bn H1 F18 KES bn vs LY (1.7) (2.0) +14% 24

Double digit growth in Profit after tax H1 F19 KES bn H1 F18 KES bn vs LY Operating profit 11.4 9.2 +23% Finance costs, net (1.7) (2.0) +14% Profit before tax 9.7 7.3 +33% Income tax expense (3.1) (2.3) Profit after tax 6.6 5.0 +33% EPS (KES/share) 6.5 5.2 +25% Interim dividend (KES/share) 2.5 2.00 +25% 25

Consistently strong cash performance H1 F19 KES bn H1 F18 KES bn vs LY Operating profit 11.4 9.2 2.2 Higher operating profit translates to robust operating cash delivery due to consistent working capital management Depreciation and amortization 2.0 1.8 0.2 Gain on land sale - (0.7) 0.7 Working capital movements Inventory (1.5) (3.7) 2.2 Debtors 0.5 (1.1) 1.6 Creditors 3.3 7.5 (4.1) Cash generated from operations 15.7 13.0 2.7 Net interest paid (1.7) (1.9) 0.2 Operating Cash Conversion at 118% Income tax paid (1.4) (3.9) 2.5 Net cash from operations 12.6 7.2 5.4 Operating cash conversion 118% 126% 26

Capital expenditure increased further due to Kisumu F19 H1 investment of KES 4.8bn (F18 H1 KES 5.0bn) Construction of new brewery in Kisumu KES 3.4bn. Total cost is expected to be KES 14bn (initial estimate KES 15bn), spent KES 10.2bn so far, remaining KES 3.8bn to be paid in F19 H2 and F20 IDU spirits upgrade in Uganda KES 49m Final payments on F18 beer and spirits capacity expansions in Kenya KES 154m Investment in returnables and coolers for growth KES 380m Upgrade electrical infrastructure in SBL KES 124m Investment behind brand Innovation KES 100m Efficiency and quality improvements Efficiency improvements, Kenya and Uganda in water and energy usage East Africa leading globally in overall equipment efficiency Health and Safety Roofing of the logistics yard in Uganda Vehicle/pedestrian segregation and Electronic Bottle Inspector (EBI) side wall inspection in SBL Environment Ultramodern water recovery projects to commence in Kenya and Uganda 27

Thank You Please hold the questions to the end 28

F19 H2 PRIORITIES Andrew Cowan Group Managing Director 29

Priorities going forward Opportunities for further growth Commercialize the Kisumu brewery Bottled beer back to growth in Kenya Win in premium leading with Scotch Deliver productivity initiatives Accelerate mainstream spirits Deliver key innovation projects Maintain focus on People 30

Q & A Session 31

Cautionary Statement concerning forward-looking statements: This document contains forward-looking statements. These statements can be identified by the fact that they do not relate only to historical or current facts. In particular, forward-looking statements include all statements that express forecasts, expectations, plans, outlook, objectives and projections with respect to future matters, including trends in results of operations, margins, growth rates, overall market trends, the impact of changes in interest or exchange rates, the availability or cost of financing to EABL, anticipated cost savings or synergies, expected investments, the completion of any strategic transactions or restructuring programmes, anticipated tax rates, changes in the international tax environment, expected cash payments, outcomes of litigation, anticipated changes in the value of assets and liabilities related to pension schemes and general economic conditions. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risk and uncertainty because they relate to events and depend on circumstances that will occur in the future. There are a number of factors that could cause actual results and developments to differ materially from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements, including factors that are outside EABL's control. These factors include, but are not limited to: Economic, political, social or other developments in countries and markets in which EABL operates, which may contribute to a reduction in demand for EABL s products, adverse impact on EABL s customer, supplier and/or financial counterparties, or the imposition of import, investment or currency restrictions (including the potential impact of any global, regional or local trade wars or any tariffs, duties or other restrictions or barriers imposed on the import or export of goods between territories; Changes in consumer preferences and tastes, including as a result of changes in demographics, evolving social trends (including any shifts in consumer tastes towards locally produced smallbatch products), changes in travel, vacation or leisure activity patterns, weather conditions, and/or a downturn in economic conditions; any litigation or other similar proceedings (including with customs, competition, environmental, anti-corruption or other regulatory authorities), including litigation directed at the beverage alcohol industry generally or at EABL in particular; Changes in the domestic and international tax environment, leading to uncertainty around the application of existing and new tax laws and unexpected tax exposures; The effects of climate change, or legal, regulatory or market measures intended to address climate change, on EABL s business or operations, including on the cost and supply of water; Changes in the cost of production, including as a result of increases in the cost of commodities, labour and/or energy or as a result of inflation; Legal and regulatory developments, including changes in regulations relating to production, distribution, importation, marketing, advertising, sales, pricing, labelling, packaging, product liability, antitrust, labour, compliance and control systems, environmental issues and/or data privacy; The consequences of any failure by EABL or its associates to comply with anti-corruption, sanctions, trade restrictions or similar laws and regulations, or any failure of EABL s related internal policies and procedures to comply with applicable law or regulation; The consequences of any failure of internal controls, including those affecting compliance with existing or new accounting and/or disclosure requirements; Contamination, counterfeiting or other circumstances which could harm the level of customer support for EABL s brands and adversely impact its sales; EABL s ability tomaintain its brand image and corporate reputation or toadapt toa changing media environment; Increased competitive product and pricing pressures, including as a result of actions by increasingly consolidated competitors, that could negatively impact EABL s market share, distribution network, costs and/or pricing; Any disruption toproduction facilities, business service centres or information systems, including as a result of cyber-attacks; EABL s ability to derive the expected benefits from its business strategies, including in relation to expansion in emerging markets, acquisitions and/or disposals, cost savings and productivity initiatives or inventory forecasting; Increased costs for, or shortages of, talent, as well as labour strikes or disputes; Fluctuations in exchange rates and/or interest rates, which may impact the value of transactions and assets denominated in other currencies, increase EABL s cost of financing or otherwise adversely affect EABL s financial results; Movements in the value of the assets and liabilities related to EABL s pension plans; EABL s ability torenew supply, distribution, manufacturing or licence agreements (or related rights) and licences on favourable terms, or at all, when they expire; or Any failure by EABL to protect its intellectual property rights. All oral and written forward-looking statements made on or after the date of this document and attributable to EABL are expressly qualified in their entirety by the above cautionary factors. Any forward-looking statements made by or on behalf of EABL speak only as of the date they are made. EABL does not undertake to update forward-looking statements to reflect any changes in EABL's expectations with regard thereto or any changes in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based. The information in this document does not constitute an offer to sell or an invitation to buy shares in EABL or an invitation or inducement to engage in any other investment activities. Past performance cannot be relied upon as a guide to future performance. 32