Caribbean Cream profit up 138%

Caribbean Cream profit jumps 138% in Q1-2015-16

Caribbean Cream profit jumps 138% in Q1-2015-16

It seems to have taken a bit longer than expected for Caribbean Cream to start showing some of the major potential it exhibited on going in public in 2013. Slower revenue growth and higher cost are some of the factors that held back the promised profit out turn. The company now seems over those initial drags and appears poised for a fabulous year, with increased profits and big gains in the stock price, well above the $2.50 peak, reached in July.
That seems to be receding with a big jump in profits for the full year to February when profits climbed to $57 million from $35 million for 2014 and a big leap in the first quarter ending May, jumping 138 percent to $39 million. Growth was only constrained by added cost for cleaning and sanitation which helped push administrative cost to $56 million by $20 million. Loans are down $20 million and brought interest cost down. Inventories fell from $96 million to $61 million, the fall in the world market price for milk powder would have been a major factor behind this, coupled with a greater level of stability of the Jamaica dollar that would suggest there was little benefit from having large amounts of inventories. Trade receivables climbed $20 million, cash moved to $51 million from $17 million in 2014 and could end up around $200 million by the end of fiscal year to February 2016, payables declined from $109 million to $80 million and equity capital has moved to $326 million, lending strength to the company’s improving financial health.
Kremi GapntFor the quarter, revenues climbed 15 percent to $289.2 million from $251.5 million in May 2014 and was better than for the February quarter of $273 million. The growth in revenues is better than the 11 percent garnered in the February quarter. Lower operating expenses of $178 million versus $183 million in 2014 drove gross profit up 61 percent with profit margin jumping to 38 percent from 27 percent in 2014 and was helped by a 13 percent price increase ahead of the February quarter. Marketing costs remain static at $11 million while interest cost fell from $5.8 million to $4.6 million.
Earnings came in at 10 cents per share, well over the 4 cents reported in 2014 and not very far from the full year earnings of 15 cents. Earnings for fiscal year ending 2016 should hit 75 cents per share as cost savings and marketing measures take effect. The price of milk powder, a major input into the production of ice cream, fell 25 percent since the end of the May quarter to the end of August on the US market and looks like it headed lower, will result in major cost savings. The company enjoys 5 years tax free holiday commencing in 2013 when it listed on the junior market of the Jamaica Stock exchange and after that is entitled to 5 years of taxation at half the regular tax rate.
The stock traded at $1.67 on Friday on the junior market of the Jamaica Stock Exchange but was as high as $2.50 coming from a low of 61 cents earlier in the year. The next set of results due early October, will most likely give the stock another shot in the arm.

Gleaner trades 19m shares on JSE

Glnr 8-15 Market activity was halted on the Jamaica Stock Exchange due to technical issues that occurred around mid-day a Jamaica Stock Exchange source indicated to IC Insider. Trading resumed at 3 PM and closed at 3:30.
Not many more securities traded after resumption, but 19 million Gleaner shares changed hands, 18,996,993 units were bought through Victoria Mutual Wealth Management and sold by Mayberry Investments from house inventory at 3:17:44 PM with a value of $36,094,287.
Trading ended with just 23 securities changing hands as 23,173,353 units, valued at $96,919,052 were exchanged. At the end 13 stocks gained, compared to only 2 on Wednesday and 4 declined in all market segments.
JSE Sum -10- 9-15The JSE Market Index rose 2.14 points to 98,798.05, the JSE All Jamaican Composite index added only 2.40 points to 109,368.67 and the JSE combined index gained 52.07 points to end at 102,111.65.
IC bid-offer Indicator| At the end of trading, in the main and junior markets, the Investor’s Choice bid-offer indicator had a reading of 9 stocks with bids higher than their last selling prices and 5 with offers that were lower.
In trading, Cable and Wireless had 1,263,154 shares changing hands to close at 48 cents, down 2 cents, Carreras traded 379,430 units at $50.25, gaining 25 cents from Wednesday’s close, Gleaner Company traded 19 million units in two trades at $1.90, after adding 5 cents. Jamaica Broilers traded at $5.90 at the end with 66,961 shares changing ownership JSE fn qts 10-9-15after gaining 30 cents. Jamaica Producers added $1.90 to $18 with 171,230 units trading. The Jamaica Stock Exchange shares added 5 cents with 8,465 shares changing hands at $7.55, JMMB Group had 52,374 shares changing hands at $7.65, National Commercial Bank traded 136,629 shares and closed at $30, Sagicor Group with 22,400 shares changing hands, closed at $12.70 with a 20 cents increase. Scotia Group traded 134,944 units in closing at $24.12 for an increased just 2 cents and Proven Investments ordinary share, traded 1,208,025 units at 19.5 US cents after losing 0.05 cents.

Partial rebound for JSE

The Jamaica Stock Exchange ended trading with 20 securities changing hands and a total of 3,429,742 units, valued at $38,607,071 being active. At the end there were only 2 stocks rising, 6 declining in all market segments. The main market saw 2 stocks rising and 2 declining at the close.
JSE Sum -9- 9-15The JSE Market Index rose 518.70 points to 98,795.91. The JSE All Jamaican Composite index added 579.76 points to 109,366.27 and the JSE combined index gained 423.11 points to end at 102,059.58.
IC bid-offer Indicator| At the end of trading, in the main and junior markets, the Investor’s Choice bid-offer indicator had a reading of 12 stocks with bids higher than their last selling prices and 5 with offers that were lower.
In trading, Cable and Wireless had 481,497 shares changing hands to close at 50 cents, Caribbean Cement traded 47,336 shares at $8 and gained 40 cents, Carreras traded 214,390 at $50, JSE fn qts 9-9-15Grace Kennedy traded 3,505 units at $64 after adding $1. The Jamaica Stock Exchange shares lost 30 cents with 113,480 shares changing hands to $7.50, National Commercial Bank traded 400,450 shares and closed at $30, Radio Jamaica ended with 10,411 units changing hands but lost a cent to close at $3, Sagicor Group with 45,991 shares changing hands, closed at $12.50. Scotia Group traded only 6,343 units in closing at $24.10 for an increased 36 cents and Proven Investments ordinary share, traded 429,388 units at 20 US cents.

JSE up on Wednesday morning

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National Commercial Bank dropped back $2.49 in early trading on Tuesday but this morning the stock had 400,000 units trading at $30. JSE Intra 9- 09-15Carreras traded 201,440 at $50, Jamaica Stock Exchange lost 25 cents with 100,000 shares to $7.55, Proven Investments 429,388 units trading was at 20 US cents.
In the junior market Lasco Financial Services has traded 577,000 at $1.80.
The market have so far seen trading in 18 securities with a volume of 1,756,025 units and 4 stocks declining and 3 rising. Trading activity resulted the JSE Market Index rising 587.66 points to 98,864.87. The JSE All Jamaican Composite index climbed 656.84 points to 109,443.35 and the JSE combined index gained 544.78 points to be at 102,181.25. The junior market fell 1.02 points to 989.75.

Knutsford’s flawed audited statements

KnutsIf the Jamaica Stock Exchange and the Financial Services Commission have the interest of investors at the forefront for protection they would demand the total withdrawal Knutsford Express’ audited reports for 2014 and 2015. The audited statements for both years, are filled with errors or questionable treatment of transactions, raising questions about the accuracy of the entire reports.
The report for 2015 has profit of $69 million or 69 cents per share versus $50 million in 2014 or $1.07 cents per share after deferred taxation of $5 million (2014: $5.6 million). Revenues amount to $454 million, a big 38 percent increase over the $329 million in 2014. Problem is that the earnings per share for 2014 is overstated due to inaccurate computation of the average number of shares issued in 2013. Further, the audited statement while showing earnings per share of $1.07 for 2014 in the income statement, goes on to state erroneously by way of a note, that “using the weighted average number of shares at end of 2015 would result in earnings being 50 cents for 2014”.
Since Knutsford is not taxable for the next 4 years it is difficult to see why the company would need to compute differed tax charge when whatever timing difference is likely to be less than 4 years on which no tax would be payable, the report does not give details so it is difficult to determine what items would result in such differences, but a look at the detailed expenses suggest that at best it would be a one year difference hence there is no need to book the differed tax.
JSE signThe audited financial report states “During January 2014, the Company raised additional capital of $99,862,700 from its initial public offering of 99,999,003 shares for its enlistment on the Jamaica Stock Exchange Junior Market”. This of course is completely wrong since the company issued 26 million bonus shares in 2013. While the public offering was for 20,000,000 ordinary shares, only 4,867,338 shares were offered by the company and 15,132,662 shares were existing shares of the pre IPO shareholders. At the time the IPO came, 95,132,662 ordinary shares were already issued, the average number of shares should be around 60 million rather than 46.8 million used to compute the 2014 EPS which would have worked out around 83 cents. That is around what it is and should be reported as. In addition there is no need to re-compute this figure and the 100 million shares in existence won’t change it one bit.
In the taxation note it states that the company at the end of 5 years “is required to delist and pay all exempted taxes within 5 years or opt to list on the main exchange for the next 5 years to maintain tax exemption received in the last 5 years. That seems to be stated incorrectly, IC Insider went to the manager of the stock exchange for clarification.
“ Those companies that have been given five (5) years will have to remain listed for 10 years as compared to 15 years had they been given 10 years incentive. They are not compelled though to migrate to the main market but can remain on the Junior Market if they are in compliance with capitalization and other Junior Market requirements”, the Stock Exchange reply stated.
Knuts signThe junior market rules require a mentor for these companies. One reason is to ensure that slip up like the above don’t happen. The issue begs the question what are the board of directors doing, after all they sign off on the financial report, they should ensure that information included that they are aware of, are not incorrectly stated.
Income statement| It would have been very informative if the profit and loss statement carried cost relating to functions such as direct operating cost, marketing and sales rather than all cost being lumped into administrative and other expenses, then one would easily see how the operating side of the business is doing before administrative cost.
But other questions remain, the listing of expenses show employer’s statutory payroll contributions at $31.84 million for 2015 and $16.58 million in 2014 versus salaries and related expenses at $86.86 million in 2015 and $54.65 million in 2014, these work out at 27 percent and 33 percent respectively. That of course cannot be correct as it should not be more than roughly 10 percent for Education taxes, National Housing Trust, Heart and National Insurance.

General Accident lousy results

Gen Acc General Accident reported lousy first quarter results for 2015, with profit of $26 million and followed that up with even worse figures for the June quarter, just $457,000, and $26.6 million for the first half of 2015, compared with $88 million and $187 million respectively, in 2014. |
Investors were not pleased with the numbers and marked the stock down to a 52 weeks low of $1.30 from which it has made some recovery to $1.50 where it is now trading on the junior market of the Jamaica Stock Exchange.
“For the first half of the year, gross written premium grew to $3.8 billion, an increase of 10 percent over the same period last year despite a sharp contraction in property rates, operating costs also increased by 8 percent in line with our expectations”, management said in their report accompanying the results.
The report when on to state, “Nevertheless, claims charges saw a significant increase by 30 percent to $413 million from $316 and from $169 million for the June 2014 quarter to $228 million in 2015. This sharp increase in claims negatively impacted both our loss ratio and combined ratio which worsened from 86 percent (2014) to 106 percent for comparable periods, respectively”.
The company reported an underwriting loss of $59 million for the half year versus a surplus of $69 million in 2014 and for the Jun e quarter, a loss of $45.6 million compared to a surplus of $20 million.
Investment| Investments delivered reduced income for the first half of 2015 with $94 million earned, below the $125 million generated in 2014 and for the June quarter $50 million versus $68 million in 2014.
“Over short periods of time, our loss ratios may experience significant volatility. Nevertheless, we remain confident that the consistent application of General Accident’s standards and practices will continue to produce underwriting profits over the long-term. As a result, we expect our performance in the second half of the year to improve significantly” Paul Scott, Chairman and Sharon Donaldson, Managing Director reported to shareholders.
Looking forward, investment income could be under threat with lower inflation and interest rates locally and less likelihood of robust gain in the forex market. It will take good management of the various resources to grow income and profits going forward beyond 2015.
Earnings per share for the six months, came out at just 3 cents, down from 18 cents last year.

MVL & VMBS Wealth big trades on Wednesday

MVL Stockbrokers sold a series of large trades in several stocks in early Wednesday trading and VMBS Wealth was the main buyer in what appears to be prearranged trades. The trades had negligible impact on the market indices. IC Insider has been reliably informed, that the trades reflect transfer of shares that were held at the JCSD under broker MVL Stockbrokers for VMBS Wealth pension funds and have been transferred to VMBS Wealth as the brokerage house. So far its is unclear why the change was not effected by a instructions to the Stock Exchange to simply switch the broker’s accounts.
JSE Intra 26- 08-15 A total of 32 securities with a volume of only 32,708,601 units valued at $359,295,340 have traded with 13 stocks declining versus only 6 that rose.
The All Jamaica Index trades at 108,749.59 to dip 117.62 points, JSE Market Index fell 105.24 points to 98,244.17. The combined index slipped 114.26 points to be at 100,935.78 and the junior market index 916.82, down 1.66 points.
Significant trades are Grace Kennedy with 1,399,021 units, Jamaica Stock Exchange 2,105,142 shares, JMMB Group 8,580,291 shares Lasco Manufacturing 12,000,000 units and Sagicor Group 2,940,000.

D&G profit fell in Q4

Red Stripe tinProfit fell to $815 million for Desnoes & Geddes, the brewers of the famous Red Stripe beer, in the final quarter of the fiscal year to June, versus $1 billion in 2014. Earnings per share came in at 83 cents with $1.12 in 2014. The latter includes gain on sale of investments in Eastern Caribbean breweries, equal to 35 cents per share. IC Insider is forecasting $1.05 per share earnings, for the year to June 2016.
Revenues came in at $4.4 billion for the quarter versus $3.8 billion in 2014, for the full year $16 billion versus $14.3 billion. Sales growth was helped by a combination of increased volume, product mix and price increase, the company stated. Royalties earned amounted to $533 million in the year and $525 million in 2014.
General, selling and administrative expenses were virtually static for the year at $1.26 billion compared to $1.22 billion but marketing cost rose 37 percent to $1.37 billion against an increase of 15.7 percent to $5.46 billion in gross profit.
For 2015, the company paid a dividend of 13 cents in March while a dividend 27 cents was paid in December last year, providing a yield of 12 percent based on the stock price of $4.10 on August 21 last year. Based on the increased profit and past dividend payments, investors can expect to see an increase for the next dividend payment.
The company’s stock last traded at $7 on Friday on the Jamaica Stock Exchange giving it a PE ratio of 8.4 and a 100 percent premium to net asset value.
The stock valuation may be on the high side just now compared with others in the market, there are a few things investors should focus on. These include the likelihood of increased sales that should occur in the period leading up to the next general elections, with the high dividend yield and falling interest rates the stock will become more attractive as an income generator in the not too distant future.

JSE decline continues on Thursday

Bear The Jamaica Stock Exchange on Thursday closed with main market indices recording tripe digit losses, adding to the big losses on Wednesday. The market closed with a fairly high participation rate of 30 securities changing hands but with low activity resulting in just 2,344,156 units trading, valued at only $14,789,149 with 9 stocks rising, 10 declining with 2 stocks closing at 52 weeks high and 1 at a 52 weeks’ low, in all market segments.
At the close, the JSE Market Index fell 657.55 points to 98,441.76, the JSE All Jamaican Composite index dived 734.97 points to close at 108,970.43 and the JSE combined index dropped 731.14 points to end at 101,943.74.
JSE sum- 20-08-15 IC bid-offer Indicator| At the end of trading in the main and junior markets, the Investor’s Choice bid-offer indicator had a reading that reflects continuation of declining stocks having the upper hand over advancing one with 6 stocks with bids higher than their last selling prices and 9 with offers that were lower.
In trading, Cable and Wireless had 214,092 shares changing hands to end at 40 cents, Caribbean Cement had 112,969 units changing hands at $8.01, Desnoes & Geddes traded 212,380 shares at $7 for a gain of 21 cents, Gleaner closed with 17,000 shares and fell 20 cents to $1.80. JSE fn Qts-20-08-15Jamaica Broilers traded at $5.85 with 8,550 shares changing hands for a loss of 20 cents, JMMB Group traded 383,750 shares at $7.95, National Commercial Bank traded 26,130 shares to end lower by $1 to $29, Proven Investments ordinary share traded 225,030 units at 19.5 US cents, up 0.50 cents. Sagicor Group with 17,030 shares changing hands, closed 51 cents down at $12.95, Sagicor Real Estate Fund fell 25 cents to close at $8.50 while trading a mere 865 units, Scotia Group traded 11,272 units to close at $23.75, up 5 cents. Supreme Ventures ended at $3.35 with 92,500 units to be down by 15 cents and Jamaica Money Market Brokers 7.50% preference share traded 75,000 units at $2.

JSE up but looks weak at close

Jamaica Stock Exchange Traded at a new high of $9 on Tuesday.

Jamaica Stock Exchange Traded at a new high of $9 on Tuesday.

The Jamaica Stock Exchange on Tuesday closed with main market indices recording strong gains but with high levels of stocks rising and falling. The market closed with a high participation rate of 39 securities changing hands accounting for 2,172,400 units trading, valued at $19,484,355 with 15 stocks rising, 14 declining with 3 stocks closing at 52 weeks high, in all market segments.
At the close, the JSE Market Index jumped 687.52 points to 101,415.34, the JSE All Jamaican Composite index rose 768.46 points to close at 112,294.07 and the JSE combined index gained 530.40 points to end at 104,839.62.
JSE sum- 18-08-15r IC bid-offer Indicator| At the end of trading in the main and junior markets, the Investor’s Choice bid-offer indicator had a reading that was very negative with only of 3 stocks with bids higher than their last selling prices and 9 with offers that were lower.
In trading, Cable and Wireless with 154,750 shares changing hands with a loss of 1 cent to end at 43 cents, Caribbean Cement had 50,227 units changing hands with a gain of 50 cents at $8, Carreras traded at $50 with 8,706 shares changing hands, Gleaner closed with 63,082 shares and fell 56 cents at $2.17. Grace Kennedy traded at $64 down $1 with 79,842 shares, Hardware & Lumber ended up at $17, after adding $1 with just 500 units changing hands. Jamaica Broilers traded at $6.05 with 8,300 shares changing ownership and lost 94 cents, Jamaica Producers traded at $18.40 with 4,198 shares changing ownership with a loss of 60 cents. JMMB Group traded 20,084 shares at $7.73 to lose 26 cents, with the company reporting strong increase in profit for the first quarter, Jamaica Stock Exchange traded 70 cents up at a new high of $9 with only 9,990 shares changing hands. Mayberry Investments had 50,000 shares trading at $3.40, National Commercial Bank traded 62,888 shares at $30, JSE fn Qts-18-08-15Palace Amusement gained $5 in trading 566 shares to end at $65, encouraged by the company reporting earnings of $26.56 per share for the year ended June. Pan Jamaican Investment closed at $62 after trading 27,303 shares to gain $1. Sagicor Real Estate Fund lost 30 cents to close at $7.80 while trading 140,000 units, Salada Foods ended with 2,750 units trading at $8.50 with a loss of $1.90. Scotia Group traded 25,980 units to close at $24.50, up 50 cents, Supreme Ventures ended at $4.50, with 20,000 units to be up 50 cents but the bid at the end of the day was at $4 to sell 300,000 units and Proven Investments ordinary share traded 137,105 units at 19 US cents, up from 18.5 US cents.

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