COPENHAGEN: A.P. Moller – Maersk’s third quarter is characterised by
improved profitability across the business. Earnings before interest,
tax, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) improved 14% to USD 1.7bn in
the quarter, reflecting an increase in EBITDA margin to 16.5%. Revenue
decreased slightly by 0.9% to USD 10.1bn. Operating cash flow increased
by 25% to USD 1.7bn with a cash conversion ratio of 105% and free cash
flow before capitalized lease payments was USD 1.5bn.
“While the Global Container demand, as expected, was lower in Q3 due
to weaker growth in the global economy, A.P. Moller - Maersk continued
to improve the operating results. We delivered strong free cash flow and
a return on invested capital of 6.4% as a result of strong operational
performance in Ocean, higher margins in Terminals and solid earnings
progress in Logistics & Services,” says Søren Skou,
CEO of A.P. Moller - Maersk, and continues:“The strong performance for
the quarter combined with our expectations for the rest of the year,
led to the recent upgrade of our earnings expectations for 2019. We will
continue our focus on profitability and free cash flow in Q4 and into
2020.”
EBITDA in Ocean improved 13% to USD 1.3bn and EBITDA margin increased
to 17.4%, reflecting the focus on profitability through capacity
management and operational performance which mitigated lower freight
rates and modest volume growth in Q3 of 2.1%. Revenue was USD 7.3 which
is on par with Q3 last year.
Terminals & Towage reported an increase in EBITDA to USD 313m and
an increase in revenue of 5.8% to USD 986m in the third quarter. In
gateway terminals, the increase in EBITDA of 33% to USD 261m and a
margin of 31.7%, was driven by a volume growth of 9.2%, which
contributed to higher utilization, combined with stronger cost
efficiency.
Logistics & Services progressed with gross profit up 13% to USD
336m following increased activities in intermodal and warehousing &
distribution, however partly offset by lower revenue in air and sea
freight forwarding. The improved gross profit lead to an increase in
EBITDA of 34% to USD 94m and an EBITDA margin of 5.8% and an EBIT
conversion ratio of 17.5%.
Net interest-bearing debt decreased further to USD 12.1bn at the end
of Q3 (USD 12.9bn at end Q2 2019) after buying back shares of USD 363m
as part of the share buy-back programme announced in May 2019.
Solid progress despite market uncertainties As part of the strategic
target to become more balanced in earnings between the Ocean and
non-Ocean partly through cross-selling of end-to-end and digital
services, Maersk continues to develop products and services for
customers, resulting in high customer satisfaction.
“I am pleased with the progress on the transformation of A.P. Moller -
Maersk. We are making progress across multiple fronts including our
digital transformation and growth in our land-based logistics products
and terminals business,” says Skou. Looking at the measurements of the
development in the transformation this quarter, Maersk reports a cash
return on invested capital improvement (CROIC) of 13.4% in Q3 from 9.0%
in the same period last year.
Furthermore, non-Ocean revenue increased 3.7% in Q3 2019, driven by
strong growth in the gateway terminals and growth within the strategic
integrated parts of Logistics & Services such as intermodal and
warehousing. The improved profitability led to an increase in return on
invested capital (ROIC) to 6.4% from negative 0.2% in the same quarter
last year.
We still need to improve on profitability and return, and we continue
to take measures across the business to fund the next stages of the
transformation and maintain cost leadership. Guidance for 2019 As
announced on 21 October 2019, A.P. Moller - Maersk now expects EBITDA
for 2019 in the range of USD 5.4 – 5.8bn, from the previously
communicated USD 5bn range.
The organic volume growth in Ocean is now expected to be slightly
below the estimated average market growth, which is now expected to be
in the range of 1-2% for 2019 compared to previously an expected market
growth of 1-3%. Guidance is maintained on gross capital expenditures
(CAPEX) of around USD 2.2bn and a high cash conversion (cash flow from
operations compared with EBITDA).
CAPEX for 2020-2021 accumulated for the two years is expected to be USD 3-4bn.
The guidance continues to be subject to uncertainties due to the
weaker macroeconomic conditions and other external factors impacting
container freight rates, bunker prices and foreign exchange rates, said a
company release.
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