Group Five sees headline earnings up 95%
Construction company Group Five (GRF) expects its fully diluted headline earnings per share (HEPS) from continuing operations in the year to June to be between 310c and 345c‚ up between 75 percent and 95 percent‚ from 177c in the similar period a year ago.
An expanded African footprint boosted JSE-listed Group Five’s earnings for the year to June 2013, with headline earnings expected to be between 145% and 165% higher than the headline earnings achieved in the previous financial year.
The construction and infrastructure group pointed out that headline earnings a share (Heps) would increase, from the 116c reported in the prior year, to between 284c and 307c a share.
“Emphasis on a larger geographic footprint for more of the group’s business units, the beneficial contribution of the group’s strategic positioning for annuity-type businesses of investments and concessions, manufacturing and operations and maintenance contracts, as well as the group’s strong position in African mining and energy… mitigated, to an extent, the effects of continued fragility in the South African building and civil engineering markets,” the group said in a statement on Monday.
Fully diluted Heps from continuing operations would be between 310c and 345c a share – 75% to 95% higher than the 177c recorded in the financial year before.
Group Five also expected fully diluted earnings a share and earnings a share to turn around from a loss of 288c a share in 2012, to between 265c and 290c in 2013.
These included provisions for possible administrative penalties – the value of which was not yet disclosed – on four contracts that did not fall within the group’s leniency agreement with the Competition Commission.
In June, the commission levied a collective R1.46-billion fine on 15 of the 18 construction companies found liable for collusive tendering between 2006 and 2011.
Group Five was the first major construction company to approach the Competition Commission for leniency, which was given in return for information.
The group obtained a leniency position on 25 contracts, as it supported the commission’s investigation into the construction industry and undertook its own internal scrutiny into its previous behaviour.
Group Five would publish its financial results on August 12.