By VICTOR JUMA
In Summary
- The firm’s net profit stood at Sh110 million in the period compared to Sh105.3 million a year earlier, helped by lower loan costs.
- CMC last declared a dividend of Sh0.2 per share for the year ended September 2010 when it made a net profit of Sh406.6 million.
Motor dealer CMC
has reported a 4.4 per cent growth in full-year profits and opted not
to pay a dividend for the third year running in line with conditions set
Dubai-based Al Futtaim Group.
The firm’s net profit stood at Sh110 million in
the period compared to Sh105.3 million a year earlier, helped by lower
loan costs.
This came as the firm’s finance costs dropped to
Sh603.1 million from Sh909.3 million, saving it Sh306 million that
helped offset a rise in costs that saw its operating profit drop 3.1 per
cent to Sh2.4 billion.
Al Futtaim Group will acquire CMC Motors by March
and had agreed in September with the top owners of the auto firm to put a
tight lid on costs, including a freeze on the payment of dividends to
current shareholders.
The agreement signed by the two companies on
September 6 means that CMC shareholders, who have not earned from their
ownership in the past three years, will not get financial benefits from
their investment save for the ultimate payout from Al Futtaim.
“The directors do not recommend a dividend in respect of the financial year 2013,” the firm said in a statement.
This means that the buyout price of Sh13 a share
will be the last financial benefit CMC shareholders will derive from the
company whose shares remain suspended from the Nairobi bourse since
September 2011.
CMC last declared a dividend of Sh0.2 per share for the year ended September 2010 when it made a net profit of Sh406.6 million.
The motor dealer made its first net loss of Sh181.1 million the following year, when the dividend drought started.
CMC sales grew 4.1 per cent to Sh12.2 billion
despite its share of Kenya’s auto market having dropped to 7.4 per cent
last year compared to 9.8 per cent in 2012 and 12 per cent in 2011.
Analysts reckon that the lower market share
reflects the loss of the JLR franchise which involved the exclusive sale
of cars like Land Rover Defender, Jaguar and Range Rover brands.
These brands accounted for about 26 per cent of
CMC sales and they were transferred to rival RMA early last year. CMC’s
remaining brands are Suzuki, Maruti, Nissan Diesel, Iveco, Eicher, Ford
and Volkswagen.
The agreement inked by Al Futtaim Group on
cost-cutting is aimed at ensuring the Dubai firm inherits a financially
strong CMC with a viable long-term business model.
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