Corporate News
The Sasini land sale is the latest sell-off seen among companies in
which businessman Naushad Merali (pictured) has significant or
controlling interests, signalling a reorganisation of his business
empire. PHOTOS | FILE
By VICTOR JUMA, vjuma@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The land sale will be completed through the disposal of its subsidiaries Mweiga Estate and Wahenya Limited which hold 266.7 and 247 acres respectively.
- The land sale is the latest sell-off seen among companies in which businessman Naushad Merali has significant or controlling interests, signalling a reorganisation of his business empire.
- The Nairobi Securities Exchange-listed firm is betting on cost-cutting and value addition to its products to grow earnings in the coming years.
Agricultural firm Sasini
is set to sell 513.7 acres of its leasehold land, a transaction that
will earn it Sh1 billion and potentially boost earnings in the current
financial year.
of Sh1.02 billion,” the firm said.
This means that Sasini will book a gain of Sh1
billion in the transaction, potentially boosting its profit in the
current year ending September from the exceptional item.
This could in turn see the company raise its dividend in the period, having declared a payout of Sh0.25 per share for the year ended September last year.
Proceeds from the sale could also be used to fund
fresh investments by the company. The large profit signals the fast
appreciation of land values in the country, with Sasini taking a
conservative stance in accounting of its land holdings. The firm said a
revaluation of its leasehold land by Knight Frank Valuers Limited in
September last year found the assets to be worth Sh3.74 billion.
Despite the verdict, Sasini carried the leasehold
land in its books at Sh20 million. “The revaluation has not been adopted
in the financial statements,” the company said in a statement.
The land sale is the latest sell-off seen among
companies in which businessman Naushad Merali has significant or
controlling interests, signalling a reorganisation of his business
empire.
Mr Merali has earned billions of shillings from sale of all or part of his interests in several firms including Equatorial Commercial Bank (ECB), Airtel Kenya, Swift Global, and Kenya Data Networks (KDN).
Sasini’s land sale comes at a time when the company’s margins have suffered from high operating costs and flat sales.
It made a net profit of Sh45.4 million in the year
ended September, half of what it posted the year before. This came as
sales dropped two per cent to Sh2.7 billion, with cost of goods sold
rising 1.6 per cent to Sh2.07 billion.
The company’s net profit last peaked at Sh993.7
million in 2010 when its turnover stood at Sh2.2 billion, underlining
the falling margins over the years.
Sasini has blamed the sluggish sales on a mix of
reduced output and lower prices of its two key commodities –tea and
coffee. The company also breeds dairy cattle, with its operations spread
in Bomet, Mombasa, Nyeri and Kiambu.
No comments :
Post a Comment