In This Article:
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Revenue: Increased 65% to just over $1 billion, driven by Saverglass contribution.
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Underlying EBIT: $120.8 million, up 24.6%.
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Net Income (Underlying NPAT): $58.8 million, an increase of 1.2%.
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Underlying EPS: $4.04 per share.
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Operating Cash Flow: $125.7 million with a cash conversion rate of 92.3%.
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Dividend: Interim ordinary dividend of $0.05 per share.
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Net Debt: $155.5 million with leverage at 0.3 times net debt to EBIT.
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Australasian Cans Revenue: Increased 5.2% with EBIT up 6.4%.
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Global Glass EBIT: Increased 41% to $71 million.
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CapEx: $159 million for the half, with guidance for the year at $340 million to $360 million.
Release Date: February 12, 2025
For the complete transcript of the earnings call, please refer to the full earnings call transcript.
Positive Points
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Orora Ltd (ORRYY) successfully completed the sale of the OPS business for $1.8 billion, resulting in a strong balance sheet.
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The company has focused its portfolio on global beverage packaging, with distinct business groups in Global Glass and Australasian cans.
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Orora Ltd (ORRYY) reported a 24.6% increase in underlying EBIT, driven by Saverglass' performance.
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The G3 furnace rebuild at Gawler showed a close to 30% emissions improvement, exceeding initial expectations.
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The company announced an on-market buyback to return up to 10% of issued shares, equating to approximately $320 million.
Negative Points
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Orora Ltd (ORRYY) experienced a 30.1% decrease in EBIT for Gawler due to the G3 shutdown, which took longer than expected.
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The company is facing a structural decline in commercial wine demand in Australia, impacting its glass operations.
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Saverglass saw a 13% volume decline and a 15% revenue drop due to market softness and destocking.
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The G3 furnace rebuild cost increased significantly to approximately $184 million, impacting financial performance.
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Orora Ltd (ORRYY) is making a restructuring provision and impairment of $84 million for the Gawler operations.
Q & A Highlights
Q: Can you discuss the corporate overhead costs from the OPS business and how they will be optimized moving forward? A: Shaun Hughes, Chief Financial Officer: The allocation for the second half will be roughly $5 million. We expect to maintain these levels for FY26 and start reducing costs from FY27 after stabilizing the glass business.
Q: How sustainable are the cost improvements in Saverglass if volumes return? A: Shaun Hughes, Chief Financial Officer: Some cost reductions will hold, such as synergies and insurance savings. However, profit sharing, which is required in France, will resume as business performance improves. We've also reduced the workforce by 3%, which should hold as volumes increase.