Local News>Ethanol exports, higher
poultry prices push Ja Broilers Q1 profits
Susan
Gordon - Business Reporter
|
|
Export of ethanol and higher prices for poultry meat boosted both
gross income and helped Jamaica Broilers double its net profit, to $180.91
million, in this year's first quarter, when compared to last year.
But the group's senior vice-president for operations, Chris-topher Levy,
has suggested that robust performance for the quarter to August 2, may
not be sustained, given the recent retreat in ethanol price in the United
States.
"The ethanol market has been softening for the past two months,"
Levy told the Financial Gleaner.
Broilers' 60-million gallon-a-year ethanol plant, which came on stream
during last year's second quarter, accounted for $2.2 billion in revenues,
or 35.4 per cent of the group's $6.2 billion in turnover for the current
period. This year's first quarter turnover was 121 per cent higher than
last year's when the ethanol plant was not yet in production.
Increases
But Broilers in the statement from Chairman Danny Williams and CEO Robert
Levy that accompanied the quarterly accounts, pointed out that there were
"increases in poultry and feed revenues" because of prices the
company imposed to compensate for hikes in "imported grain and other
raw material".
While Broilers was able to carry only about three per cent of its turnover
to the bottom line as net profit, its operating profit, before financing
costs and taxation, at $333 million, was 150 per cent higher than the
corresponding period last year.
But financial costs jumped 78 per cent, to $112 million to cover, according
to Williams and Levy, higher US and Jamaican dollar borrowings "to
meet increased working capital needs, including ethanol inventories".
susan.gordon@gleanerjm.com
The Financial Gleaner
The Financial Gleaner
|