Centennial Coal annual net profit down 29pc to $17.1m 12:26, Thursday, 17 August 2006
Sydney - Thursday - August 17: (RWE Australian Business News) - Centennial Coal Company Ltd (ASX code: CEY) net profit fell 29 per cent to $17.1 million in the year ended June 30 from $24.2 million for the previous year. As foreshadowed, the result was hit by a pre-tax loss of $47.8 million at the Newstan mine as the longwall traversed a severe fault zone, which then led to major equipment reliability issues and the loss of 2.0 million tonnes of coal production from the mine. Excluding significant items and discontinued operations, net profit was up 30 per cent to $50.6 million from $38.9 million. Revenues rose 24 per cent to $807.9 million from $650.5 million with higher export coal prices and a change in sales mix with the addition of hard coking coal contributing to the revenue growth. Sales volumes were just ahead of last year, despite the production issues at Newstan, due to the full-year contributions from Mandalong, Tahmoor and Mannering. Demand for coal has remained strong in both the export and domestic markets. Basic earnings per share were 6.0c, down from 11.7c. Final dividend is a steady, unfranked 7c, payable on October 6 to shareholders registered September 22. Total payout for the year is 13c, unchanged from last year. Centennial's dividend reinvestment plan will continue to apply with a discount of 2.5 per cent.
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Other adverse impacts on the year's result were Tahmoor's revenues being constrained by low-priced "carry-over" tonnage arising from prior-year operational problems, poor geological conditions at Mannering during its development phase and reduced production at Myuna as it transitioned out of the Great Northern Seam to the Fassifern Seam. Due to the commodity boom, the group's cost structure has been hit by rising prices for inputs and a drop in standards generally by contractors as a result of significant demand for their services and a general skills shortage. With Newstan's severe problems now behind it and the mine back in production, Centennial's major mines have performed well since year end (although Tahmoor is on its longwall rampdown as it moves to LW24). Several mines, including Mandalong, Angus Place and Springvale, are operating at record levels, demonstrating the value of Centennial's targeted capital expenditure, which has seen significant improvement in productive capability and reliability. During the first half of the 2007 year, Centennial will only have two longwall changeovers - Tahmoor, which is about to commence, and Mandalong, scheduled to start in September. Shares in Centennial today rose 5c to $3.35.
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