Results centre
Interim Results FY23
Interim Results FY23: Otto de Bont sharing highlights
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- Underlying EBIT1 increased 16% to €75.2m (2021: €64.7m), on revenue up 4% to €952m (2021: €916m)
- EBIT margin increased to 7.9% (2021: 7.1%) supported by good margins in the Commercial and Specialities divisions
- Underlying EBITDA1 increased to €131.9m (2021: €126.6m)
- Statutory profit of €53.4m (2021: €36.5m) as a result of increased EBIT and a net exceptional profit* of €10m
- Core net debt# increased to €388m (March 2022: €303m), reflecting the initial debt impact of €66m for the Paro acquisition and €16m of innovation capital investments. Net debt to EBITDA of 1.7x (March 2022: 1.4x) in line with expectationsMain drivers of first half result included strong operational performance, balancing volume pressure with cost control, and margin management by passing inflation through to customers. Higher recyclate prices in Q1 and certain favourable one-off items supported the performance
1The definition and rationale for the use of non-IFRS measures are included in note 17.
* Core net debt used for banking leverage calculations excludes the impact of IFRS 16 lease liabilities and UK PPP net debt. -
- Commercial Netherlands completed the acquisition of the Paro C&D business in Amsterdam in August. Site rationalisation and integration are now underway
- Renewi’s first advanced sorting line in Ghent has been built and is expected to be commissioned in H2 FY23, to allow our customers to be compliant with Vlarema 8 legislation which bans recyclable materials from being incinerated
- Good progress on committed €100m+ circular innovation investments with €45m deployed to date
- Both regulation and societal pressure continue to increase demand for recycled materials and to divert more waste from landfill and incineration to recycling
- Recycling rate increased to 68.4% (March 2022: 67.2%)
- Renewi 2.0 programme and Mineralz & Water recovery plan remain on track
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- We are mindful of the current challenging macroeconomic outlook with continuing inflationary cost pressures, the movement of recyclate prices to normalised levels and ongoing pressure on volumes in the near-term. Accordingly, management’s expectations for the full year are unchanged despite a stronger than anticipated first half performance
- In the medium-term we are committed to protecting our margins, offsetting inflation with price, countering volume pressure with strong cost control and benefitting from the Group’s proven resilience. We remain on track to deliver the remaining €40m+ from the identified value drivers
- In the longer-term we remain confident that, with regulation driving increasing demand for recycled materials, Renewi is well positioned for growth in its markets and to serve customers profitably as the circular economy develops and the market for low carbon secondary materials evolves
1The definition and rationale for the use of non-IFRS measures are included in note 18.
*Including discount rate changes following central bank rate increases and inflationary impacts on long-term contracts.
#Core net debt used for banking leverage calculations excludes the impact of IFRS 16 lease liabilities and UK PPP net debt.
Financial Highlights
- Underlying EBIT1 increased 16% to €75.2m (2021: €64.7m), on revenue up 4% to €952m (2021: €916m)
- EBIT margin increased to 7.9% (2021: 7.1%) supported by good margins in the Commercial and Specialities divisions
- Underlying EBITDA1 increased to €131.9m (2021: €126.6m)
- Statutory profit of €53.4m (2021: €36.5m) as a result of increased EBIT and a net exceptional profit* of €10m
- Core net debt# increased to €388m (March 2022: €303m), reflecting the initial debt impact of €66m for the Paro acquisition and €16m of innovation capital investments. Net debt to EBITDA of 1.7x (March 2022: 1.4x) in line with expectationsMain drivers of first half result included strong operational performance, balancing volume pressure with cost control, and margin management by passing inflation through to customers. Higher recyclate prices in Q1 and certain favourable one-off items supported the performance
Strategic Highlights
- Commercial Netherlands completed the acquisition of the Paro C&D business in Amsterdam in August. Site rationalisation and integration are now underway
- Renewi’s first advanced sorting line in Ghent has been built and is expected to be commissioned in H2 FY23, to allow our customers to be compliant with Vlarema 8 legislation which bans recyclable materials from being incinerated
- Good progress on committed €100m+ circular innovation investments with €45m deployed to date
- Both regulation and societal pressure continue to increase demand for recycled materials and to divert more waste from landfill and incineration to recycling
- Recycling rate increased to 68.4% (March 2022: 67.2%)
- Renewi 2.0 programme and Mineralz & Water recovery plan remain on track
Outlook
- We are mindful of the current challenging macroeconomic outlook with continuing inflationary cost pressures, the movement of recyclate prices to normalised levels and ongoing pressure on volumes in the near-term. Accordingly, management’s expectations for the full year are unchanged despite a stronger than anticipated first half performance
- In the medium-term we are committed to protecting our margins, offsetting inflation with price, countering volume pressure with strong cost control and benefitting from the Group’s proven resilience. We remain on track to deliver the remaining €40m+ from the identified value drivers
- In the longer-term we remain confident that, with regulation driving increasing demand for recycled materials, Renewi is well positioned for growth in its markets and to serve customers profitably as the circular economy develops and the market for low carbon secondary materials evolves
1The definition and rationale for the use of non-IFRS measures are included in note 18.
*Including discount rate changes following central bank rate increases and inflationary impacts on long-term contracts.
#Core net debt used for banking leverage calculations excludes the impact of IFRS 16 lease liabilities and UK PPP net debt.