Sappi’s profit jumps

File picture: Supplied

File picture: Supplied

Published Feb 10, 2016

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Johannesburg - Sappi, the world’s biggest producer of dissolving wood pulp, said first-quarter profit more than tripled after higher prices for the cotton substitute helped offset the effects of a drought in South Africa.

Net income for the three months through December increased to $75 million, compared with $24 million a year earlier, the Johannesburg-based company said in a statement on Wednesday. Revenue declined 6.8 percent to $1.28 billion and net debt was $1.73 billion, compared with the $1.77 billion the company reported three months ago.

Sappi is diversifying its production, as a global shift to digital publishing and advertising dampens the demand outlook for its traditional glossy paper business, and is also seeking to reduce costs and cut debt. The company expects “strong growth” in earnings in the current financial year compared with 2015 and sees net debt falling further during the year, it said in the statement.

“The successful result was attributable to higher graphic paper volumes, improved pricing for dissolving wood pulp and cost containment initiatives,” the company said. “The strategy to reposition Sappi into a profitable and cash-generative diversified woodfibre group is well on track.”

The depreciation of the rand, which declined 10 percent relative to the dollar during the quarter, contributes positively to Sappi’s profit margin for dissolving wood pulp, which it exports from South African mills. Sappi’s operations in its home country, which include paper and packaging manufacturing as well as pulp, account for about half of earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation

Low rainfall in South Africa, which dropped last year to the lowest since records began in 1904, had a negative effect of $6 million in the quarter, Sappi said. The company needs water for its manufacturing process, and low rainfall also slows tree growth.

BLOOMBERG

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