TIDMMCON
RNS Number : 5368X
Mincon Group Plc
13 August 2018
Mincon Group plc
2018 Half Year Financial Results
Mincon Group plc (ESM:MIO AIM:MCON), the Irish engineering group
specialising in the design, manufacture, sale and servicing of rock
drilling tools and associated products, announces its half year
results for the six months ended 30 June 2018.
Percentage
30 June 30 June change
2018 2017 in
EUR'000 EUR'000 Period
----------------------------------------------- ------- -------- -----------
Product revenue:
Sale of Mincon product (EUR'000) 47,406 35,211 35%
Sale of third party product (EUR'000) 8,316 11,745 (29%)
Total revenue (EUR'000) 55,722 46,956 19%
-------
Sale of Mincon product as a % of total revenue 85% 75%
----------------------------------------------- ------- -------- -----------
Profit before tax (EUR'000) 7,820 6,317 24%
----------------------------------------------- ------- -------- -----------
Profit attributable to shareholders of the
parent company (EUR'000) 6,122 5,072 21%
----------------------------------------------- ------- -------- -----------
Earnings per share 2.91c 2.41c 21%
----------------------------------------------- ------- -------- -----------
Joe Purcell, Chief Executive Officer, commenting on the results,
said:
"We continue to build a coherent, complementary product range of
consumables to address the surface drilling needs of the mining,
geothermal, water well, piling and construction sub sectors. We are
on a path to remove third party sales from our line-up where that
makes commercial sense, to either manufacture them in our own
plants, or discontinue the sales. The gross margin percentage on
manufactured products is higher and is a more significant driver of
our earnings.This is particularly true where the engineering value
add is significant.
Our goal is not revenue growth for its own sake, but sustainable
earnings growth, and niche manufacturing to develop defendable
intellectual property that underwrites our margins over time. We
work to build long term sustainable, defensible market positions by
offering value for money rather than price as our central
proposition. We see better engineering as core to our product
offering.
In H1 2018 the following has been delivered,before exceptional
items:
-- Revenue up 19 % to EUR55.7 million
-- Mincon manufactured product up 35 % to EUR47.4 million
-- Gross profit up 20 % to EUR22.0 million
-- Operating profit up 19 % to EUR8.1 million
-- Profit before tax up 30 % to EUR8.1 million
-- Earnings per share up 21 % to 2.91 cent
Profit before tax (after acquisition costs) in H1, 2018 has
increased by 24% to EUR7.8 million from EUR6.3 million in H1, 2017,
and the earnings per share also increased by 21%. Excluding the
acquisition of Driconeq, the operating profit margin rose to 16.5%,
compared to 14.5% in the prior year. Driconeq delivered a gross
profit margin of 25.2%, while the pre-acquisition Group achieved a
gross profit margin of 41.8% compared to the pre-exceptional gross
profit margin of 39.1% of 2017. The underlying gross profit of the
Group continues to rise in the more value-added end of the Mincon
Group product range and the product demand and the requirement to
pass on supply side increases, has driven some improvement in
margins.
Driconeq
In March 2018 we announced the acquisition of Driconeq and the
business has performed in line with our expectations in the interim
period. We continue to invest management time, funds and planning
to unpick the problems that have crept into that group over the
last few years, and we are very confident we can embed the business
safely with our own. Integrating it has delivered a complex set of
tasks which will take much of the rest of the year to complete.
Driconeq added some 23% acquisition growth in Mincon product
revenue in H1, on top of the c. 12% organic growth, which includes
the full half year for PPV and Viqing. Having said that, the
contribution to operating profit from the acquisition is not
significant, at about 2.5% of its revenue. We are optimistic about
the performance of Driconeq with our Viqing business in Sweden, and
with our businesses in Australia, and South Africa as we integrate
the Driconeq businesses there into our local operations.
We have invested in Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment
partners in South Africa now, as part of helping that country move
forward, and we are developing, with those partners, the best model
for that market. Overall though, this acquisition has suited our
product line-up, our management and market reach. The Driconeq
gross margin is expected to increase through some price
improvements in line with the market, through obtaining better
terms from the suppliers as their trading risk falls, and through
achieving some efficiency gains as operations are combined with our
existing businesses. Driconeq is also working through a structured
programme of overhead reduction.
We have approved two additional furnaces for HardTekno as
first-round capital approvals which will provide short term relief
to their capacity issues. Overall we are delighted to have the
Driconeq companies and teams in our Group.
Mincon Nordic
Mincon Nordic reached breakeven in H1 and has started to make a
contribution to operating profits. At the deepest point this
business had accumulated start-up losses of over EUR1.5 million,
but we were obliged to make the investment in order to replace the
former distributor in the Nordic region, and to give us the entry
we needed into the construction drilling and piling markets. We
would like to thank our former distributor, Robit, for all the work
they did, and continue to do, as a non-exclusive representative for
the Mincon products in their home market.
We have now built direct distribution in that region through
Mincon Nordic OY, and it is now of an economic size. We are taking
the Viqing business out of Mincon Nordic OY and combining it with
its Driconeq neighbours in Sunne, Sweden. Those businesses make the
same products in the same town and the management teams and
factories are, through agreement, in the process of amicable
consolidation.
The rest of the business comprises the customer centre for the
Finland region and the engineering design business, PPV. These are
fine companies with good teams, and strong growth ambitions.
Capital investment
We reduced the emphasis on acquisitions two years ago as value
was driven out by aggressive bidding, and instead we made
significant decisions to invest in a three-year rolling capital
investment programme. We are now substantially through that
investment plan, having approved some EUR18 million, 400% of our
depreciation rate, in the eighteen-month period. The capital
equipment has been arriving, and where this is production machinery
it is quickly brought into the manufacturing process.
Where the capital investment is in process improvements such as
heat treatment, lead times are very lengthy, up to two years, for
specification, delivery, commissioning and bringing on-line, but we
are about to go live in Benton, Illinois, followed by Perth,
Australia and Marshalls, Sheffield, through the rest of the year.
This approved spend was some EUR6 million of the capital investment
plan referred to above, and we expect to see the benefits through
the 2019 year. We will be commissioning the pre-heat furnaces in
HardTekno in Sweden in Q1, 2019.
Other than that, we see the capital expenditure commitments
slowing through H2, 2018 and beyond as the current factory
build-outs are completed and the plant and machinery we have bought
is commissioned and brought into the production process . With this
investment coming online we will review over the coming year the
best location to manufacture products to supply the customer base
while driving quality and efficiency. We continue to build out core
excellent hammer and bit production facilities in Ireland,
Australia and the USA to enable flexibility in manufacturing and
delivery, while maintaining margin and quality.
Acquisitions
We know that the improvement in the cycle is a rising tide that
raises all boats, and that it makes good acquisitions look great
and weak acquisitions look acceptable. We will continue with the
substantial work on the company portfolio to derive the value that
underwrote some of those business decisions. Some of the
acquisitions we have made have been great successes for us, some
have been adequate, and some still require work for various reasons
sometimes beyond the control of local management.
We seek to continuously engineer improvement in our systems,
businesses and management teams. Bedding in acquisitions is a
process, an extended process in some cases, but we have nearly
always managed to keep the management teams we have brought in and
blended their experience and knowledge of products and markets to
give us a great platform for the continuing development of the
Group.
Products and markets
We now manufacture 85% of what we sell and as expected this has
given us better control on engineering, quality control and
margins. As we mentioned in the 2017 annual report we are seeing a
general improvement in margins in the sector, and while there are
pressures on the raw materials side, we are beginning to be able to
recoup those input cost-increases from the end customers after four
years or more of margin squeeze.
The Americas are the only key area that suffered a set back in
growth. As we have commented previously we lost a large distributor
to receivership in Chile in 2017. The decline in the USA is largely
due to not being able to supply against order for the market in H1.
That situation has since been recovered by a greatly increased
supply from our factories at the end of the half, and we expect an
improvement through the rest of the year as the backlog clears.
As we have said, we do not look for price leadership with our
products, that is not generally our market position, but neither do
we discount our products to drive sales. We continue to develop and
drive analysis across the Group on margins by product and customer,
to understand our sales and markets better, and to focus where we
can add value for our customers on one side, and our shareholders
on the other. Our Board requires us to focus on return on capital
employed, on cash flow and on return on investment over the long
run.
The hydraulic hammer systems
We capitalised some EUR711,000 of expenditure on this
development project for our hydraulic hammer systems in the first
half and carry the investment in the balance sheet at EUR2.4
million. We are committed to work to the schedule of the customer
and the mine, and the plan is to install the system and go live at
the end of Q3 in accordance with their maintenance schedules for
key equipment. We are in the contract and purchase order process at
present, though we note that any payment during this production
development will be nominal.
We intend to continue to work this system through the commercial
development phase in H2, and we expect to spend EUR1.25 million in
that period without earning any revenue. This is the most expensive
stage of the launch as we will be using our own materials, staffing
the customer with our own commissioning and service team on site,
and investing in a broad support service team off site as well. By
investing in this way we will gain fundamental knowledge in how to
support this system for customers and we will be able to develop
and protect the physical and intellectual property of what, if the
systems work as engineered and expected, will be among the most
valuable assets the Group owns.
The environment in which the system will work is extreme, costly
and not fault tolerant, and because of this the engineering has to
be innovative and robust.
Large hammers and bits
The equipment in which we invested in order to address our large
hammer manufacturing has been applied to producing the current
smaller size ranges. We have had insufficient capacity to apply to
the manufacture of the new ranges. However the engineering work has
been completed on the DTH range to the 24 inch size and where we
have delivered these large hammers both the pricing and performance
have been well received. The order book for the standard ranges has
continued to build so we are still not in a position to sustain
delivery at the large end potentially until 2019. In the mean time
we will make and sell some of the large hammers to test them with
some customers in some markets in order to build the reputation of
the hammers and prepare our service side for these products.
Profit margins
Profit margins continue to recover across the entire set of
businesses, even as demand reaches levels we have not encountered
before. Excluding Driconeq EBITDA percentage for the Group was
19.8%, the gross profit percentage was 41.8% and the operating
profit percentage was 16.5% on the same basis when acquisition
costs are excluded. These are considerable improvements in the
margins over the same period last year despite supply side cost
increases. In Mincon Group, excluding the Driconeq acquisition, we
kept 70% of any improvement in the gross profit in H1 as an
improvement in the operating profit. This is consistent with the
2017 Group out-turn.
The Driconeq Group made a gross profit percentage of 25.2% in
the period since acquisition, and an operating profit of c. 2.6%.
This is in line with our expectations for the first year, with
three months of the integration process now completed. It is noted
that the gross profit is already an improvement from the date of
acquisition, and we would like to thank the various teams for the
work done to date.
Any acquisition can be traumatic for the company bought and the
Group buying, if it has significant scale, and it always takes time
to relieve the commercial stresses. Our approach is to correct the
form of the business, invest to make it a good fit with the Mincon
Group before we attempt to speed it up, and invest the time to
understand what we have bought and the people joining us.
Balance sheet and Cash Flow
Acquiring and funding the Driconeq acquisition, investing in our
capital expenditure programme and meeting the requirement to step
up our investment in the working capital cycle reduced our free
cash at the end of H1. All of these have been addressed in detail
and the working capital investment plan was outlined in the 2017
annual report.
Inventory
We previously flagged that we intended to invest a further EUR5
million in raw material inventory as we ramped up manufacturing to
meet the expanding order book. We invested in plant, we have
stepped up manufacturing volumes against orders, and we have very
significant inventory in transit and arriving to support the sales
growth we realised last year but which we have not been able to
support in H1. We estimate that we are approximately half way
through the working capital cycle that has absorbed these funds and
we are now getting to the point where the increased inventory is
hitting our own shelves in the customer centres.
This inventory swell through the working capital cycle should
unwind to some degree in the H2 for the Group, though we may
maintain the raw material investment to moderate the risk of price
increases and basic non-supply due to the sector demands elsewhere.
Of the current uplift, EUR4.6 million came in with Driconeq and we
believe is good inventory, EUR4.5 million is in raw material
strongly bought forward to support the increased turnover and to
mitigate the supply side price increases, and the rest is in
transit or reaching the shelves of the sales offices.
We mentioned in the Q1 statement that we had slowed down order
intake since we were disappointing customers as lead times moved
out and short run and non-standard products could not be
economically manufactured. We have commissioned new plant right
across the Group in H1, and we approach the second half with more
capacity on-line than the Group has ever had. The three new
facilities in; Benton, Illinois, the Prototype and Short Run
factory in Shannon, and the new insourced facility in Sheffield on
our Marshalls site are coming up to speed and should play a
valuable part in delivering capacity in H2. We then have to drive
sales through the customer centres by increasing reliability in
meeting orders and delivery dates.
Dividend
The Board of Mincon Group plc has recommended the payment of an
interim dividend in the amount of 0.0105 (1.05 cent) per ordinary
share, which will be paid on the 25 September 2018 to shareholders
on the register at the close of business on the 31 August 2018.
Outlook
We had sales of EUR50 million last year in H2, 2017. Since then
we have added the Driconeq revenue (net of intercompany sales) of
EUR20 million in a full year. The potential impacts from trade
wars, tariffs and the UK leaving the EU are business uncertainties,
but at present we are considering those impacts to be neutral.
While we stay alert to the context of our businesses, products and
markets, our planning is long term, considered and based around
long term objectives.
The team is confident across the businesses, the sector appears
strong, lead times have increased for capital goods which should
mean strength in the sectors that we serve, and orders remain
robust in most of our markets. There are efficiencies to be found
in the way we are doing business and that remains a key focus for
the executive team. We have a lot of work to do to extract what the
Mincon Group can actually deliver when we find our internal
efficiencies, and take the opportunities ahead of us for new
products and new routes to market.
We have new facilities coming on stream in Perth and Benton in
two of our core factories which should deliver margin and quality
improvements as we take external processes in-house. That will help
us achieve the quality in our products that lie at the core of what
we do, and sustain consistently the engineering that creates and
develops our margins.
I would like to thank the shareholders for their support through
the last few years, and the Mincon staff for their commitment to
the success of the business."
13 AUGUST 2018
For further information, please contact:
Mincon Group plc
Joe Purcell, Chief Executive Tel: + 353 (61) 361 099
Officer
Peter E. Lynch Chief Operating
Officer
Davy Corporate Finance (Nominated Tel: +353 (1) 679 6363
Adviser and ESM Adviser)
Anthony Farrell
Daragh O'Reilly
Unaudited condensed consolidated
income statement
For the 6 months ended 30 June
2018
2018 2017
Notes Excluding Exceptional Including Excluding Exceptional Including
exceptional items exceptional exceptional items exceptional
items (Note items items (Note items
EUR'000 6) EUR'000 EUR'000 6) EUR'000
EUR'000 EUR'000
------------------- ----- ------------- ------------ ------------- ------------- ------------ -------------
Continuing
operations
Revenue 2 55,721 - 55,721 46,956 - 46,956
Cost of sales 4 (33,760) - (33,760) (28,589) (1,849) (30,438)
------------------- ----- ------------- ------------ ------------- ------------- ------------ -------------
Gross profit 21,961 - 21,961 18,367 (1,849) 16,518
General and selling
expenses 4 (13,874) (268) (14,142) (11,578) (1,198) (12,776)
------------ ------------- ------------
Operating profit 8,087 (268) 7,819 6,789 (3,047) 3,742
Finance cost (60) - (60) (58) - (58)
Finance income 59 - 59 14 - 14
Foreign exchange
gain/(loss) 35 - 35 (505) - (505)
Contingent
consideration (33) - (33) - - -
Settlement gain - - - - 3,124 3,124
------------ ------------- ------------
Profit before tax 8,088 (268) 7,820 6,240 77 6,317
------------------- ------------ ------------- ------------
Income tax expense (1,512) - (1,512) (1,091) - (1,091)
------------------- ----- ------------- ------------ ------------- ------------- ------------ -------------
Profit for the
period 6,576 (268) 6,308 5,149 77 5,226
------------------- ----- ------------- ------------ ------------- ------------- ------------ -------------
Profit attributable
to:
- owners of the
Parent 6,122 5,072
- non-controlling
interests 186 154
------------------- ----- ------------- ------------ ------------- -------------
Earnings per
Ordinary
Share
Basic earnings per
share, 9 2.91c 2.41c
Diluted earnings
per share, 9 2.87c 2.39c
------------------- ----- ------------- ------------ ------------- -------------
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial
statements.
Unaudited condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive
income
For the 6 months ended 30 June 2018
2018 2017
H1 H1
EUR'000 EUR'000
------------------------------------------------------------ ------- --------
Profit for the period 6,308 5,226
Other comprehensive income/(loss):
Items that are or may be reclassified subsequently to
profit or loss:
Foreign currency translation - foreign operations (2,389) (2,609)
Other comprehensive income/(loss) for the period (2,389) (2,609)
------------------------------------------------------------ ------- --------
Total comprehensive income for the period 3,919 2,617
------------------------------------------------------------ ------- --------
Total comprehensive income attributable to:
- owners of the Parent 3,733 2,463
- non-controlling interests 186 154
------------------------------------------------------------ ------- --------
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial
statements.
Unaudited consolidated statement of financial
position
As at 30 June 2018
30 June 31 December
2018 2017
Notes EUR'000 EUR'000
---------------------------------------------- ----- -------- ------------
Non-Current Assets
Intangible assets 11 29,510 25,094
Property, plant and equipment 12 27,861 22,576
Deferred tax asset 8 512 150
Other non-current assets 44 100
----------------------------------------------- ----- -------- ------------
Total Non-Current Assets 57,927 47,920
----------------------------------------------- ----- -------- ------------
Current Assets
Inventory 13 43,850 31,851
Trade and other receivables 14 19,714 17,560
Other current assets 7,224 4,709
Current tax asset 8 868 842
Cash and cash equivalents 11,312 28,215
Total Current Assets 82,968 83,177
----------------------------------------------- ----- -------- ------------
Total Assets 140,895 131,097
----------------------------------------------- ----- -------- ------------
Equity
Ordinary share capital 2,105 2,105
Share premium 67,647 67,647
Undenominated capital 39 39
Merger reserve (17,393) (17,393)
Share based payment reserve 10 845 512
Foreign currency translation reserve (5,329) (2,940)
Retained earnings 61,303 57,391
----------------------------------------------- ----- -------- ------------
Equity attributable to owners of Mincon Group
plc 109,217 107,361
----------------------------------------------- ----- -------- ------------
Non-controlling interests 972 787
Total Equity 110,189 108,148
Non-Current Liabilities
Loans and borrowings 15 1,194 1,405
Deferred tax liability 8 367 318
Deferred contingent consideration 16(c) 6,032 6,931
Other liabilities 311 368
Total Non-Current Liabilities 7,904 9,022
----------------------------------------------- ----- -------- ------------
Current Liabilities
Loans and borrowings 15 463 668
Trade and other payables 13,357 7,721
Accrued and other liabilities 7,076 4,403
Current tax liability 8 1,906 1,135
Total Current Liabilities 22,802 13,927
----------------------------------------------- ----- -------- ------------
Total Liabilities 30,706 22,949
----------------------------------------------- ----- -------- ------------
Total Equity and Liabilities 140,895 131,097
----------------------------------------------- ----- -------- ------------
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial
statements.
Unaudited condensed consolidated statement of cash
flows
For the 6 months ended 30 June 2018
--------------------------------------------------------- ------------------
H1 H1
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Operating activities:
Profit for the period 6,308 5,226
Adjustments to reconcile profit to net cash provided
by operating activities:
Depreciation 1,879 1,362
Fair value movement on deferred contingent consideration 33 (3,124)
Finance cost 60 58
Finance income (59) (14)
Income tax expense 1,512 1,091
Other non-cash movements (949) 2,180
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
8,784 6,779
Changes in trade and other receivables (347) (3,099)
Changes in prepayments and other assets (2,289) (1,511)
Changes in inventory (9,011) 2,426
Changes in trade and other payables 3,448 555
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Cash provided by operations 585 5,150
Interest received 59 14
Interest paid (60) (58)
Income taxes paid (317) (485)
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Net cash provided by/(used in) operating activities 267 4,621
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Investing activities
Purchase of property, plant and equipment (5,280) (3,092)
Acquisitions, net of cash acquired (7,603) (2,000)
Payment of deferred contingent consideration (1,439) -
Investment in short term deposits - -
Proceeds from former joint venture investments 59 56
Net cash provided by/(used in) investing activities (14,263) (5,036)
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Financing activities
Dividends paid (2,210) (2,105)
Repayment of loans and finance leases (337) (416)
Drawdown of loans - -
Net cash provided by/(used in) financing activities (2,547) (2,521)
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Effect of foreign exchange rate changes on cash (360) (199)
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Net increase/(decrease) in cash and cash equivalents (16,903) (3,135)
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the
year 28,215 36,836
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the period 11,312 33,701
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial
statements.
Unaudited condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity
for the 6 months ended 30 June 2018
Share Foreign
based currency
Share Share Merger Other Un-denominated Capital payment translation Retained Non-controlling Total
capital premium reserve reserve capital contribution reserve reserve earnings Total interests equity
EUR'000 EUR'000 EUR'000 EUR'000 EUR'000 EUR'000 EUR'000 EUR'000 EUR'000 EUR'000 EUR'000 EUR'000
--------------- -------- ------- -------- ------- -------------- ------------ ------- ----------- -------- ------- --------------- -------
Balances at 1
July 2017 2,105 67,647 (17,393) - 39 - 251 (1,574) 54,476 105,551 638 106,189
--------------- -------- ------- -------- ------- -------------- ------------ ------- ----------- -------- ------- --------------- -------
Comprehensive
income:
Profit for the
period - - - - - - - - 5,020 5,020 149 5,169
Other
comprehensive
income/(loss):
Foreign
currency
translation - - - - - - - (1,366) - (1,366) - (1,366)
----------- -------- ------- --------------- -------
Total
comprehensive
income (1,366) 5,020 3,654 149 3,803
----------- -------- ------- --------------- -------
Transactions
with
Shareholders:
Share-based
payments - - - - - - 261 - - 261 - 261
Dividend
payment - - - - - - - - (2,105) (2,105) - (2,105)
Balances at 31
December 2017 2,105 67,647 (17,393) - 39 - 512 (2,940) 57,391 107,361 787 108,148
--------------- -------- ------- -------- ------- -------------- ------------ ------- ----------- -------- ------- --------------- -------
Comprehensive
income:
Profit for the
period - - - - - - - - 6,122 6,122 185 6,307
Other
comprehensive
income/(loss):
Foreign
currency
translation - - - - - - - (2,389) - (2,389) - (2,389)
----------- -------- ------- --------------- -------
Total
comprehensive
income (2,389) 6,122 3,733 185 3,918
----------- -------- ------- --------------- -------
Transactions
with
Shareholders:
Share-based
payments - - - - - - 333 - - 333 - 333
Dividend
payment - - - - - - - - (2,210) (2,210) - (2,210)
Balances at 30
June 2018 2,105 67,647 (17,393) - 39 - 845 (5,329) 61,303 109,217 972 110,189
--------------- -------- ------- -------- ------- -------------- ------------ ------- ----------- -------- ------- --------------- -------
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial
statements.
Notes to the consolidated interim financial statements
1 General information and basis of preparation
Mincon Group plc ("the Company") is a company incorporated in
the Republic of Ireland. The unaudited consolidated interim
financial statements of the Company for the six months ended 30
June 2018 (the "Interim Financial Statements") include the Company
and its subsidiaries (together referred to as the "Group"). The
Interim Financial Statements were authorised for issue by the
Directors on 9 August 2018.
The Interim Financial Statements have been prepared in
accordance with IAS 34, 'Interim Financial Reporting', as adopted
by the EU. The Interim Financial Statements do not include all of
the information required for full annual financial statements and
should be read in conjunction with the Group's consolidated
financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2017 as set out
in the 2017 Annual Report (the "2017 Accounts").
The Interim Financial Statements do not constitute statutory
financial statements. The statutory financial statements for the
year ended 31 December 2017, extracts from which are included in
these Interim Financial Statements, were prepared under IFRSs as
adopted by the EU and will be filed with the Registrar of Companies
with the Company's 2017 annual return. They are available from the
Company website www.mincon.com and, when filed, from the registrar
of companies. The auditor's report on those statutory financial
statements was unqualified.
The Interim Financial Statements are presented in Euro, rounded
to the nearest thousand, which is the functional currency of the
parent company and also the presentation currency for the Group's
financial reporting.
The financial information contained in the Interim Financial
Statements has been prepared in accordance with the accounting
policies applied in the 2017 Accounts.
Critical accounting estimates and judgements
The preparation of interim financial statements requires
management to make judgements, estimates and assumptions that
affect the application of accounting policies and the reported
amounts of assets and liabilities, income and expenses. The
estimates and associated assumptions are based on historical
experience and other factors that are believed to be reasonable
under the circumstances, the results of which form the basis of
making the judgements about the carrying values of assets and
liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources.
Actual results may differ materially from these estimates. In
preparing the Interim Financial Statements, the significant
judgements made by management in applying the Group's accounting
policies and the key sources of estimation uncertainty were the
same as those that applied to the 2017 Accounts.
IFRS not yet effective
The Group is required to adopt IFRS 16 Leases from 1 January
2018. The Group has commenced an initial assessment of the
potential impact on its consolidated financial statements but has
not yet completed its detailed assessment. It is expected that the
Group will recognise right of use assets and related lease
liabilities for its operating leases.
2. Revenue
H1 H1
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
---------------------------- ------- --------
Product revenue:
Sale of Mincon product 47,406 35,211
Sale of third party product 8,315 11,745
Total revenue 55,721 46,956
---------------------------- ------- --------
3. Operating Segments
Operating segments are reported in a manner consistent with the
internal reporting provided to the chief operating decision maker
(CODM). Our CODM has been identified as the Board of Directors.
Having assessed the aggregation criteria contained in IFRS 8
operating segments and considering how the Group manages its
business and allocates resources, the Group has determined that it
has one reportable segment. In particular the Group is managed as a
single business unit that sells drilling equipment, primarily
manufactured by Mincon manufacturing sites.
Entity-wide disclosures
The business is managed on a worldwide basis but operates
manufacturing facilities and sales offices in Ireland, Australia,
the United States, the United Kingdom, Sweden, South Africa and
Canada and sales offices in six other locations including Finland,
Spain, Namibia, Tanzania, Chile and Peru. In presenting information
on geography, revenue is based on the geographical location of
customers and non-current assets based on the location of these
assets.
Revenue by region (by location of customers):
H1 H1
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
----------------------------------------- ------- --------
Region:
Ireland 444 330
Americas 10,229 13,598
Australasia 18,482 11,926
Europe, Middle East, Africa 26,566 21,102
Total revenue from continuing operations 55,721 46,956
----------------------------------------- ------- --------
Non-current assets by region (location of assets):
30 June 31 December
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
Region:
Ireland 12,809 10,381
Americas 16,180 14,796
Australasia 7,166 5,241
Europe, Middle East, Africa 21,260 17,352
Total non-current assets(1) 57,415 47,770
---------------------------------------------------- ------- -----------
(1) Non-current assets exclude deferred tax assets.
4. Cost of Sales and operating expenses
Included within cost of sales, selling and distribution expenses
and general and administrative expenses were the following major
components:
Cost of sales
H1 H1
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
--------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Raw materials 16,246 9,892
Third party product purchases 6,569 9,378
Employee costs 6,939 4,449
Depreciation 1,461 1,059
Impairment of capital equipment inventory (note 6) - 1,081
Impairment of finished goods inventory (note 6) - 768
Other 2,545 3,811
Total cost of sales 33,760 30,438
--------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Other operating expenses
H1 H1
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
------------------------------------------------- ---------- --------------
Employee costs (including director emoluments) 8,771 6,774
Depreciation 418 303
Impairment of trade receivable (note 6) - 1,198
Other 4,953 4,501
Total other operating costs 14,142 12,776
-------------------------------------------------- ---------- --------------
5. Employee information
H1 H1
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
-------------------------------------------- ------- --------
Wages and salaries - including directors 13,255 10,006
Social security costs 1,318 618
Pension costs of defined contribution plans 669 437
Share based payments (note 10) 333 162
Total employee costs 15,575 11,223
-------------------------------------------- ------- --------
The Group capitalised payroll costs of EUR166,000 in H1 2018 in
relation to research and development.
The average number of employees was as follows:
H1 H1
2018 2017
Number Number
-------------------------------------------------- ------ -------
Sales and distribution 124 101
General and administration 61 55
Manufacturing, service and development 309 175
-------------------------------------------------- ------ -------
Average number of persons employed 494 331
-------------------------------------------------- ------ -------
6. Exceptional Items
H1 H1
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
------------------------------------------------- -------- -------
Cost of sales
Impairment of capital equipment inventory - (1,081)
Impairment of finished goods inventory - (768)
------------------------------------------------- -------- -------
Total cost of sales - (1,849)
------------------------------------------------- -------- -------
General, selling and distribution expenses
Acquisition costs (268) -
Impairment of trade receivable - (1,198)
------------------------------------------------- -------- -------
Total general, selling and distribution expenses (268) (1,198)
------------------------------------------------- -------- -------
Fair value movement on contingent consideration - 3,124
------------------------------------------------- -------- -------
Total exceptional items (268) 77
------------------------------------------------- -------- -------
The Group provides for all receivables where there is objective
evidence, including historical loss experience, that amounts are
irrecoverable. The Group had EURnil write down in receivables in
the period ended 30 June 2018, (30 June 2017 EUR1.2 million from a
South American distributor was considered no longer
recoverable).
In August 2014 the Group acquired a 65% majority shareholding in
Rotacan. In June 2017 the Group acquired the 35% minority interest
in this business for cash consideration of EUR2 million which was
settled in July 2017. The acquisition of the minority shareholding
in Rotacan resulted in a credit to the income statement as the
amount paid to settle the contingent consideration was less than
the director's estimate of its fair value at 31 December 2016.
7. Acquisitions
In March, 2018 Mincon acquired 100% shareholding in the Driconeq
Group, a group that specialises in the design, manufacture, sale
and support of drill rods to mining, waterwell and construction
industries for a consideration of EUR7.8 million. The Driconeq
Group has manufacturing plants and sales offices in Sweden, South
Africa and Australia, it also owns a heattreatment plant in
Sweden.
A. Consideration transferred
Driconeq Total
EUR'000 EUR'000
---------------------------------- --------- --------
Cash 7,283 7,283
Deferred contingent consideration 500 500
---------------------------------- --------- --------
Total consideration transferred 7,783 7,783
---------------------------------- --------- --------
In May 2018, EUR238,746 of the deferred contingent consideration
for the Driconeq Group had been paid out.
B. Goodwill
Goodwill arising from the acquisition of the Driconeq Group has
been recognised as follows:
Total
EUR'000
-------------------------------------- --------
Consideration transferred 7,783
Fair value of identifiable net assets (3,753)
-------------------------------------- --------
Goodwill 4,030
-------------------------------------- --------
C. Acquisition related costs
Acquisition related costs amounted to approximately EUR268,000
and were included in the "operating expenses" in the income
statement for the 6 months to the 30 June 2018.
8. Income Tax
The Group's consolidated effective tax rate in respect of
operations for the six months ended 30 June 2018 was 19.3% (30 June
2017: 17.3%). The effective rate of tax is forecast at 19.3% for
2018 which is higher than prior year, this is due to the geographic
spread of profits of the Group entities in 2018 compared with 2017.
The tax charge for the six months ended 30 June 2018 of EUR1.5
million (30 June 2017: EUR1.1 million) includes deferred tax
relating to movements in provisions, net operating losses forward
and the temporary differences for property, plant and equipment
recognised in the income statement.
The net current tax liability at period-end was as follows:
30 June 31 December
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
------------------------ ------- ------------
Current tax prepayments 868 842
Current tax payable (1,906) (1,135)
------------------------ ------- ------------
Net current tax (1,038) (293)
------------------------ ------- ------------
The net deferred tax liability at period-end was as follows:
30 June 31 December
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
----------------------- ------- ------------
Deferred tax asset 512 150
Deferred tax liability (367) (318)
----------------------- ------- ------------
Net deferred tax 145 (168)
----------------------- ------- ------------
9. Earnings per share
Basic earnings per share (EPS) is computed by dividing the
profit for the period available to ordinary shareholders by the
weighted average number of Ordinary Shares outstanding during the
period. Diluted earnings per share is computed by dividing the
profit for the period by the weighted average number of Ordinary
Shares outstanding and, when dilutive, adjusted for the effect of
all potentially dilutive shares. The following table sets forth the
computation for basic and diluted net profit per share for the six
months ended 30 June:
H1 H1
2018 2017
Numerator (amounts in EUR'000):
Profit attributable to owners of the Parent 6,122 5,072
Earnings per Ordinary Share
Basic earnings per share, EUR 2.91c 2.41c
Diluted earnings per share, EUR 2.87c 2.39c
Denominator (Number):
Basic weighted-average shares outstanding 210,541,102 210,541,102
Diluted weighted-average shares outstanding 213,086,091 212,194,947
10. Share based payment
During the half year ended 30 June 2018, the Remuneration
Committee made a grant of approximately 891,144 Restricted Share
Awards (RSAs) to members of the Group executive and senior
management team. The vesting conditions include both service and
performance targets. The performance target condition is an average
growth of 5% of EPS plus CPI over three years. The fair value of
the RSA's granted is equal to the company's share price on grant
date which was EUR1.24 on 516,129 Restricted Share Awards and
EUR1.28 on 375,015 Restricted Share Awards.
11. Intangible Assets
Product development
Goodwill Total
EUR'000 EUR'000 EUR'000
----------------------------------------- -------------------- ----------- -------
Balance at 1 January 2017 1,662 23,432 25,094
----------------------------------------- -------------------- ----------- -------
Investments 711 - 711
----------------------------------------- -------------------- ----------- -------
Acquisitions - 4,030 4,030
----------------------------------------- -------------------- ----------- -------
Foreign currency translation differences - (325) (325)
----------------------------------------- -------------------- ----------- -------
Balance at 30 June 2017 2,373 27,137 29,510
----------------------------------------- -------------------- ----------- -------
12. Property, Plant and Equipment
Capital expenditure in the first half-year amounted to EUR5.3
million (30 June 2017 EUR3.1 million) of which EUR0.7 million (30
June 2017: EUR0.6 million) was invested in buildings and EUR4.5
million (30 June 2017 EUR2.5 million) was invested in plant and
machinery.
The depreciation charge for property, plant and equipment is
recognised in the following line items in the income statement:
H1 H1
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
-------------------------------------------------- ------- --------
Cost of sales 1,461 1,059
Selling, general and administrative expenses 418 303
Total depreciation charge for property, plant and
equipment 1,879 1,362
-------------------------------------------------- ------- --------
13. Inventory
30 June 31 December
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
------------------------------------ ------- ------------
Finished goods and work-in-progress 31,170 23,336
Capital equipment 2,284 2,612
Raw materials 10,396 5,903
------------------------------------ ------- ------------
Total inventory 43,850 31,851
------------------------------------ ------- ------------
Write-down of inventories during the period ended 30 June 2018
amount to EURNil (30 June 2017: EUR1.8 million and is explained in
note 6).
14. Trade and other receivables
30 June 31 December
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
-------------------------------- ------- ------------
Gross receivable 21,754 20,603
Provision for impairment (2,040) (3,043)
Net trade and other receivables 19,714 17,560
-------------------------------- ------- ------------
30 June 31 December
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
Less than 60 days 15,942 13,333
61 to 90 days 2,202 3,005
Greater than 90 days 1,570 1,222
-------------------------------- ------- ------------
Net trade and other receivables 19,714 17,560
-------------------------------- ------- ------------
At 30 June 2018, EUR4.0 million (20%) of trade receivables
balance was past due but not impaired (31 December 2017, EUR3.9
million (22%)).
15. Loans and borrowings
30 June 31 December
2018 2017
Maturity EUR'000 EUR'000
-------------------------------------- ------- ------------
Bank loans 2018-2021 1,558 1,825
Finance leases 2018-2020 99 248
--------------------------- ----------
Total Loans and borrowings 1,657 2,073
------- ------------
Current 463 668
------- ------------
Non-current 1,194 1,405
------- ------------
The Group has a number of bank loans and finance leases in the
United States, Sweden, Chile, Peru and Namibia with a mixture of
variable and fixed interest rates. The Group has been in compliance
with all debt agreements during the periods presented. None of the
debt agreements carry restrictive financial covenants.
16. Financial Risk Management
The Group is exposed to various financial risks arising in the
normal course of business. Our financial risk exposures are
predominantly related to changes in foreign currency exchange rates
as well as the creditworthiness of our financial asset
counterparties.
The half-year financial statements do not include all financial
risk management information and disclosures required in the annual
financial statements, and should be read in conjunction with the
2017 Annual Report. There have been no changes in our risk
management policies since year-end and no material changes in our
interest rate risk.
a) Liquidity and Capital
The Group defines liquid resources as the total of its cash,
cash equivalents and short term deposits. Capital is defined as the
Group's shareholders' equity and borrowings.
The Group's objectives when managing its liquid resources are:
* To maintain adequate liquid resources to fund its
ongoing operations and safeguard its ability to
continue as a going concern, so that it can continue
to create value for investors;
* To have available the necessary financial resources
to allow it to invest in areas that may create value
for shareholders; and
-- To maintain sufficient financial resources to mitigate against
risks and unforeseen events.
Liquid and capital resources are monitored on the basis of the
total amount of such resources available and the Group's
anticipated requirements for the foreseeable future. The Group's
liquid resources and shareholders' equity at 30 June 2018 and 31
December 2017 were as follows:
30 June 31 December
2018 2017
EUR'000 EUR'000
-------------------------- -------- -----------
Cash and cash equivalents 11,312 28,215
Loans and borrowings (1,657) (2,073)
Shareholders' equity 109,217 107,361
-------------------------- -------- -----------
16. Financial Risk Management (continued)
b) Foreign currency risk
The Group is a multinational business operating in a number of
countries and the euro is the presentation currency. The Group,
however, does have revenues, costs, assets and liabilities
denominated in currencies other than euro. Transactions in foreign
currencies are recorded at the exchange rate prevailing at the date
of the transaction. The resulting monetary assets and liabilities
are translated into the appropriate functional currency at exchange
rates prevailing at the reporting date and the resulting gains and
losses are recognised in the income statement.
The Group's global operations create a translation exposure on
the Group's net assets since the financial statements of entities
with non-euro functional currencies are translated to euro when
preparing the consolidated financial statements. The Group does not
use derivative instruments to hedge these net investments. The
principal foreign currency risks to which the Group is exposed
relate to movements in the exchange rate of the euro against US
dollar, South African rand, Australian dollar, Sterling and Swedish
krona.
Almost 71% of Mincon's revenue is generated in these currencies,
compared to less than 27% of the Group's cost of sales. This had a
significant translational impact on revenue when sales in local
currency are converted into euro with a knock-on impact on the
Group's gross margin and net margin. The majority of the group's
manufacturing base has a euro, US dollar or Swedish krona cost
base. While Group management makes every effort to reduce the
impact of this currency volatility, it is impossible to eliminate
or significantly reduce given the fact that the highest grades of
our key raw materials are either not available or not denominated
in these markets and currencies. Additionally, the ability to
increase prices for our products in these jurisdictions is limited
by the current market factors.
Currency also has a significant transactional impact on the
group as outstanding balances in foreign currencies are
retranslated at closing rates at each period end. There have been
material changes in the euro exchange rate since 31 December 2017,
with the exception of Sterling. The changes in the USD, South
African Rand, Australian dollar and Swedish krona have either
weakened or strengthened, resulting in a slight foreign exchange
gain being recognised in other comprehensive income and a
significant movement in foreign currency translation reserve.
Average and closing exchange rates for the Group's primary
currency exposures were as disclosed in the table below for the
period presented.
30 June 31 December
2018 H1 2018 2017 H1 2017
Euro exchange rates Closing Average Closing Average
-------------------- ------- -------- ------------ --------
US Dollar 1.16 1.21 1.20 1.12
Australian Dollar 1.58 1.57 1.53 1.52
Sterling 0.88 0.88 0.89 0.79
South African Rand 16.00 14.86 14.80 17.19
Swedish Krona 10.43 10.15 9.83 9.30
-------------------- ------- -------- ------------ --------
There has been no material change in the Group's currency
exposure since 31 December 2017. Such exposure comprises the
monetary assets and monetary liabilities that are not denominated
in the functional currency of the operating unit involved.
16. Financial Risk Management (continued)
c) Fair values
Financial instruments carried at fair value
The deferred contingent consideration payable represents
management's best estimate of the fair value of the amounts that
will be payable, discounted as appropriate using a market interest
rate. The fair value was estimated by assigning probabilities,
based on management's current expectations, to the potential
pay-out scenarios. The fair value of deferred contingent
consideration is primarily dependent on the future performance of
the acquired businesses against predetermined targets and on
management's current expectations thereof.
Movements in the year in respect of Level 3 financial
instruments carried at fair value
The movements in respect of the financial assets and liabilities
carried at fair value in the period ended to 30 June 2018 are as
follows:
Deferred
contingent
consideration
EUR'000
----------------------------------------- --------------
Balance at 1 January 2018 6,931
----------------------------------------- --------------
Arising on acquisition (note 7) 500
----------------------------------------- --------------
Other liabilities (1,439)
----------------------------------------- --------------
Fair value movement 33
----------------------------------------- --------------
Foreign currency translation differences 7
----------------------------------------- --------------
Balance at 30 June 2018 6,032
----------------------------------------- --------------
17. Commitments
The following capital commitments for the purchase of property,
plant and equipment had been authorised by the directors at 30 June
2018:
Total
EUR'000
------------------- --------
Contracted for 4,372
Not contracted for 2,160
------------------- --------
Total 6,532
------------------- --------
18. Litigation
The Group is not involved in legal proceedings that could have a
material adverse effect on its results or financial position.
19. Related Parties
We have related party relationships with our subsidiaries,
directors and senior key management personnel. All transactions
with subsidiaries eliminate on consolidation and are not
disclosed.
As at 30 June 2018 and 31 December 2017, the share capital of
Mincon Group plc was 56.84% owned by Kingbell Company which is
ultimately controlled by Patrick Purcell and members of the Purcell
family. Patrick Purcell is also a director and Chairman of the
Company. Ballybell Limited, a company controlled by Kevin Barry,
held 5.28% of the equity of the Company. In June 2018, the Group
paid a final dividend of EUR0.0105 (1.05 cent) to all shareholders
on the register at 27 May 2018, of this dividend payment Kingbell
and Ballybell Limited were paid EUR1,256,551 and EUR116,724
respectively.
There were no other related party transactions in the half year
ended 30 June 2018 that affected the financial position or the
performance of the Company during that period and there were no
changes in the related party transactions described in the 2017
Annual Report that could have a material effect on the financial
position or performance of the Company in the same period.
20. Events after the reporting date
Dividend
On 09 August 2018, the Board of Mincon Group plc approved the
payment of an interim dividend in the amount of EUR0.0105 (1.05
cent) per ordinary share. This amounts to a dividend payment of
EUR2.2m which will be paid on 25 September 2018 to shareholders on
the register at the close of business on 31 August 2018.
21. Approval of financial statements
The Board of Directors approved the interim condensed
consolidated financial statements for the six months ended 30 June
2018 on 9 August 2018.
This information is provided by RNS, the news service of the
London Stock Exchange. RNS is approved by the Financial Conduct
Authority to act as a Primary Information Provider in the United
Kingdom. Terms and conditions relating to the use and distribution
of this information may apply. For further information, please
contact rns@lseg.com or visit www.rns.com.
END
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