Skellerup Holdings' first-half profit fell 7.5 per cent due to weaker sales to the mining sector in Australia and higher finance costs for a new factory in Christchurch.
Profit slid to $8.9 million, or 4.63 cents per share, in the six months ended December 31, from $9.6m, or 5 cents, a year earlier, the Auckland-based company said in a statement. Revenue declined 9.5 per cent to $97.3m. The result is weaker than the $100.5m revenue and $10m profit forecast by brokerage Forsyth Barr.
Skellerup's industrial division, which supplies polymer products and vacuum pump equipment, posted a 6.2 per cent drop in earnings before interest and tax, primarily due to lower sales into the Australian mining sector and the impact of a stronger New Zealand currency.
Earnings edged up 1.5 per cent at its agricultural unit, which provides rubber products to the dairy industry, as the performance of the US, New Zealand and Australian markets offset weaker European demand.
"Skellerup's investment into developing new products in international markets and solid agri sales in the New Zealand market only partially offset the effects of lower sales in some of our commodity-affected markets and the strength of the New Zealand dollar in the first half of the year," chair Liz Coutts and chief executive David Mair said in a statement.