Producers’ office sale shores up cash

Charles Johnston - Chairman of JP Group

Charles Johnston – Chairman of JP Group

Jamaica Producers (JP) sold their headquarters but retained occupancy. Big corporations don’t usually do that. Reasons have been given that the proceeds will be used in other developments but the truth seems to lie elsewhere. The real story seems to lie buried in the group’s balance sheet and the cash flow statement.
Borrowings have gone up considerably to $2.15 billion from $1.18 billion at the end of June 2014, not something the group is known for in the past.
The real story shows up in the cash flow statement. Cash generated from operations was negative $340 million for the half-year and possible $700 million for the full year, with loan repayments to be made and cash and investments which are down from what use to obtain in pass years, with $730 million at the end of June this year. Producers needed to shore up the cash position and may need to do so again before too long. The company’s investment in associated companies and Joint Ventures is the area generating most profit. Management has less direct control over cash generated by these entities and profits booked may only realise a very small cash return.
The group reported earnings for the second quarter attributable to shareholders of $414 million but the bulk of that, $319 million, came from gain on sale of fixed assets. For the year to June, net profit attributable to JP shareholders was $589 million compared to $138 million in 2014 of which $429 million came from gains on disposal of fixed assets and investments.
Some of JP consumer products

Some of JP consumer products

Excluding the one off gain, profit in the June quarter from ongoing operations would be on par with the $104 million generated in 2014 quarter. The core business is not delivering much in terms of profit, with $28 million in the June quarter, down from $63 million in 2014 and just $41 million for the half year versus $43 million in 2014. Expenses have been held tight with just an $8 million increase in the quarter and $30 million increase in the half year. In the Chairman’s report to shareholders, Charles Johnston stated that “Year-to-date revenues for 2015 were down by 6 percent. This was primarily a result of the depreciation of the euro relative to the Jamaican dollar by 14 percent compared to the comparable six months period in the prior year. The major share of our revenues is denominated in euros and our European juice business is the largest contributor to the Group’s revenues. Offsetting these changes has been significant local currency revenue growth in several of our other businesses”.
Take that has a given, but end in 2014, the net results before associate and joint ventures income was just $63 million for the quarter and $42 million for the half year, not earth shattering considering revenues of more than $4 billion for the half year.
Share of profit in associated companies and joint ventures delivered increased results of $172 up from $99 million for 2015 and 2014 quarters, respectively and for the half year $274 million and $167 million partly due to increase shareholdings in Kingston Wharves.
JP management has been hard at work to radically change the group, based on results for the past few years it isn’t easy, although there are now clear enough signs that things are coming together. Producers stock is no longer the darling of investors the way it was in the 1990s and will need to rev up profit and grow at a good clip.

Massive BOJ FX sale on Thursday

BOJ 3 Bank of Jamaica intervention into the foreign exchange market pushed trading well over the US$100 million market on Thursday, that did not stop the local currency form declining, as it moved even closer to $120 to the US dollar. The selling rate for the Jamaican dollar moved up by 3 cents on Thursday, meanwhile the highest rate fell to $123.26 on Thursday from J$124.12 on Wednesday.
Purchases by dealers of foreign currencies on saw buying of the equivalent of US$124,150,664 in stark contrast to US$26,434,145 on Wednesday, while they sold the equivalent of US$118,010,252, previously US$32,677,054.
In US dollar trading , dealers bought US$121,494,099 compared to US$23,310,357 on Wednesday. The buying rate for the US dollar is up 76 cents to $118.44 and US$116,060,844 was sold versus US$31,118,844 on Wednesday, the selling rate rose 3 cents to close at $118.62.FX sum 10-9-15 The Canadian dollar buying rate rose 11 cents to $86.97, with dealers buying C$990,249 and selling C$713,506, at an average rate that climbed 72 cents to $89.81. The rate for buying the British Pound gained 80 cents to $179.58 for the purchase of £1,220,729, while £784,302 was sold, at an average rate that rose 31 cents to end at $182.58. At the end of trading, it took J$132.43 to purchase the Euro, a fall of 3 cents from Wednesday’s rate, according to data from Bank of Jamaica, while dealers purchased the European common currency at J$129.45, a decline from Wednesday’s rate of 35 cents. Other currencies bought, amounted to the equivalent of US$78,385, while the equivalent of US$201,993 was sold.
Highs & Lows| The highest and lowest rates for trading the US dollar all declined on Thursday. The highest buying rate dropped $1.70 to $117.60, FX H&L 10-9-15the lowest buying rate fell 67 cents to $96.19, the highest selling rate lost 86 cents to end at $123.26 and the lowest selling rate dived $19.15 to $96.15. The highest buying rate for the Canadian dollar climbed 50 cents to $91, the lowest buying rate is up 66 cents to $71.63 and highest selling rate fell 50 cents to end at $92.50, the lowest selling rate added $1.30 to end at $86.30. The highest buying rate for the British Pound, climbed 50 cents to $183.20, the lowest buying rate jumped 87 cents to $147.28, the highest selling rate dropped $1.83 to $186.92 and the lowest selling rate remained unchanged at $176.

Cable & Wireless’ makeover

Cable & Wireless HQ - the stock is in demand with the merger of Flow and C&W gathers pace.

Cable & Wireless HQ – the stock is in demand with the merger of Flow and C&W gathers pace.

Cable & Wireless seems to be going through a period of rebirth having ceded a great deal of their territory to the completion in past years, as the parent company chopped and changed top management. They are now growing again with pretty strong top-line gains with a stable management team.
There was much growth in the financial year to March and since then the industry has seen much change, with number portability, Flow being acquired by Cable & Wireless and Digicel acquiring Sportsmax.
“We gained around 20,000 new prepaid mobile customers resulting from number portability almost the same as left, revenue for the average new customer is more than the ones we lost” Garfield Sinclair, Chief Executive officer of Cable & Wireless (C&W) stated in a presentation to shareholders and some C&W senior staff at Wednesday’s annual general meeting of the company. Sinclair also stated “we gained four more postpaid customers to each one lost as a result of number portability”.
In a wide ranging presentation at the AGM the C&W CEO stated that the merger of the Flow and C&W has many challenges, none more so than the integration of the staff. The physical plant with differing technologies also pose challenges and with take time to be fully complete. But the CEO stated that they were making progress on all fronts as he commended the Human Resource team in the work they have done in the staff integration so far.
C&W CEO Gary Sinclair

C&W CEO Gary Sinclair

By October we would have completed the upgrading and expansion of our 4G network system on the south coast of the island to accommodate increasing demand by customers and by November that on the north coast, should be complete.
“We now have almost 900,000 cell phone customers, 250,000 landlines and 80,000 data only customers”, Sinclairstated. At the end of the fiscal year to March C&W indicated that the cell phone numbers were around 820,000 but Sinclair confirmed to IC Insider that the numbers are now at 875,000. The annual report stated that in the “peak season Christmas a record 65,000 mobile customers were added to the network”. The 2015 numbers suggest a continuation of the strong gains being made in the acquisition of mobile customers. The name change from LIME to Flow is likely to enhance the prospects for increased mobile customers. The continued growth augurs well for increased revenues and the company’s move to restart generating positive profit.
“Investors have to judge us on the EBITDA not on accounting profits that is the basis used in our industry”, Sinclair said. In this regard he said that by the end of the current fiscal year EBITDA that was at 20% of revenues in 2015 should be at 30 percent. This would work out at around $7.5 billion assuming revenues continue to grow at the 2015 pace on a standalone basis and would result in an absolute profit for the company, the first for several years. In the June quarter EBITDA rose a very strong 82 percent, with net results seeing a sharp fall to a loss of just $303 million, from a loss of $712 million in 2014 as revenues grew 13 percent to $5.45 billion, for the June 2015 quarter, aided by a 17 percent growth in mobile subscribers and 27 percent increased mobile revenues. Operating expenses were static at $4 billion but finance cost was up to $1.1 billion from $962 million in 2014, depreciation was down and amortization up.
EBITDA while an important measure, especially in the expansion phase it cannot be the sole target, ultimately investors want a return on investment and net profit ultimately is the most important measure so that dividends can be paid.
While there were few details of the merger with the Flow operations, that is expected to be a big boost to the system with more revenues and lower cost with some of the cost squeezed out from the elimination of duplications.

Gleaner trades 19m shares on JSE

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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.

2 junior stocks up 2 down on Thursday

2 Trading on Thursday ended with just 715,973 units, valued at $1,392,706 changing hands from a total of 5 securities that traded at the end of a trading session that wa suspended from Mid day until 3 PM, du to technical issues. The prices of 2 stocks advanced 2 declined with the junior market index adding 5.53 points to close at 989.02.
JM - Trade 10-9-15At the close, 5 securities ended with no bids to buy, while 5 had no stocks being offered for sale and 3 stocks closed with bids higher than the last traded prices and 3 closed with lower offers.
Stocks trading are, General Accident Insurance traded 75,317 shares with a loss of 2 cents to $1.40, Lasco Distributors closed with 98,216 units trading at $1.85 to gain 5 cents, Lasco Financial ended with just 63,155 shares changing hands at $1.80. Lasco Manufacturing closed with 90,429 units trading, ending with a gain of 1 cent at $1.95 and Medical Disposables ended with 388,856 shares changing hands with a 15 cents loss to $2.35.

JSE trading resumes

Trading on the Jamaica Stock Exchange that was suspended resumed at 3pm is will close at 3:30PM, since resumption a big block of Gleaner shares that was hanging over the market traded at $1.90 with 19 million units changing hands. Jamaica Producers also traded 171,230 units at $18.

Trading breaks down at JSE Thursday

Trading activities on the Jamaica Stock Exchange was suspended resulting from technical issues the exchange advised IC Insider. According to the information the system went down at around 12:15 PM the last traded took place at mid-day. No trading is currently taking place but there is expectation that it should resume, once the problems are resolved. In the past resumption of trading usually goes on for a period equal to the suspension.
JSE Intra 10- 09-15upThe market has so far have trading in 20 securities with a volume of 3,152,924 units, with 2 stocks declining and 1rising. Trading activity resulted the JSE Market Index falling 91.60 points to 98,704.31. The JSE All Jamaican Composite index fell 102.38 points to 109,263.89 and the JSE combined index slipped 21.98 points to be at 102,037.60. The junior market rose 7.11 points to 990.60.
The main trades so far are Cable & Wireless with 1,012,688 units at 48 cents, Carreras traded 379,430 at $50.25, National Commercial Bank had 136,629 units trading at $30, Proven Investments 1,208,025 units trading was at 19.5 US cents and Scotia Group have 134,944 shares trading at $24.12.

3 stocks up 2 down on TTSE

Guardian Holdings closed with a small gain on Thursday

Guardian Holdings closed with a small gain on Thursday

The Trinidad & Tobago Stock Exchange closed with 12 securities changing hands. The price of 3 stock rose, 2 declined and 8 traded with price unchanged. A total of 261,413 units traded, valued at $3,293,551.
At the close, the Composite Index lost 0.14 points to 1,146.37, the All T&T Index fell 29 points to 1,949.49 and the Cross Listed Index remained at 45.03.
Gains| Guardian Holdings with 8,000 shares changing hands to close at $13.91 for a gain of a cent, Guardian Media traded 5,000 shares with the price ending at $19.77 up by 1 cent and Trinidad Cement closed at $2.76 with 51,000 shares changing hands with a 1 cent gain.
Losses| National Enterprises with 10,244 shares changing hands, and lost 5 cents, to close at a 52 weeks’ low at $16.95 and Republic Bank suffered a loss of 5 cents to close at a 52 weeks’ low of $113.93 while 435 shares changing hands,
TTSE 10-9-15 Firm Trades| Clico Investment Fund posted a volume of 100,000 shares valued at $2,255,093 and remained at $22.55. First Citizens Bank had 7,031 shares changing hands to end at $35, Massey Holdings closed with 3 units trading at $62.49, National Commercial Bank traded 60,000 shares at $1.63, Point Lisas traded 500 shares at $4.07, Sagicor Financial Corporation closed with 19,000 shares changing hands at $6 and Scotiabank closed with only 200 shares changing hands unchanged at $62.50.
IC bid-offer Indicator| At the end of trading the Investor’s Choice bid-offer indicator had 8 stocks with the bid higher than their last selling prices and 4 stocks with offers that were lower.

JSE down slightly in morning session

The Jamaica market has had moderate trading in Thursday morning session with JSE Intra 10- 09-15activity so far accounting for 19 securities changing hands with a volume of 3,115,536 units, with 2 stocks declining and 10 rising.
Trading activity resulted the JSE Market Index falling 104.36 points to 98,691.55. The JSE All Jamaican Composite index fell 116.64 points to 109,249.63 and the JSE combined index slipped 34.01 points to be at 102,025.57. The junior market rose 7.11 points to 990.60.

J$120 to US$ moved even closer

1000front The selling rate for the Jamaican dollar moved 16 cents closer to $120 to the US dollar on Wednesday which is just over 1 percent away, but the public is buying the US dollar as high as J$124.12 in Wednesday trading.
Purchases by dealers of foreign currencies on Wednesday saw buying of the equivalent of US$26,434,145 in contrast to US$42,927,303 on Tuesday, while they sold the equivalent of US$32,677,054, previously US$39,419,041.
In US dollar trading , dealers bought US$23,310,357 compared to US$40,544,295 on Tuesday. The buying rate for the US dollar fell 14 cents to $117.68 and US$31,118,844 was sold versus US$37,654,298 on Tuesday, the selling rate rose 16 cents to close at $118.59.FX sum 9-9-15 The Canadian dollar buying rate eased 5 cents to $86.86, with dealers buying C$667,523 and selling C$457,173, at an average rate that climbed 85 cents to $89.09. The rate for buying the British Pound gained 87 cents to $178.78 for the purchase of £1,669,615, while £710,537 was sold, at an average rate that rose $1.48 to end at $182.27. At the end of trading, it took J$132.46 to purchase the Euro, an increase of 40 cents on Tuesday’s rate, according to data from Bank of Jamaica, while dealers purchased the European common currency at J$129.81, a rise of $1.06 on Tuesday’s rate. Other currencies bought, amounted to the equivalent of US$94,758, while the equivalent of US$122,637 was sold.
Highs & Lows| The highest buying rate for the US dollar, rose 15 cents to $119.30, the lowest buying rate inched up 8 cents to $96.86 and the FX H&L 9-9-15highest selling rate added 11 cents to end at $124.12 and the lowest selling rate jumped $16.87 to $115.30. The highest buying rate for the Canadian dollar climbed $1.11 to $90.50, the lowest buying rate is up 42 cents to $70.97 and highest selling rate added $1.38 to end at $93, the lowest selling rate remained unchanged at $85. The highest buying rate for the British Pound, climbed 20 cents to $182.70, the lowest buying rate jumped $2.32 to $146.41, the highest selling rates leapt $3 to $188.75 and the lowest selling rates gained $2.40 to $176.

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