Fliway Group's annual profit came in at the top end of guidance, sliding 31 per cent, as an operational restructure in response to a major customer loss and mounting freight costs from last year's Kaikoura earthquake staunched the decline.
Net profit fell to $3.9 million, or 8.6 cents per share, in the 12 months ended June 30 from $5.6m, or 12.4 cents a year earlier, the Auckland-based company said in a statement. Revenue edged up 3.4 per cent to $85.4m as the company attracted new customers in the second half. The result pipped Fliway's own guidance for profit to be between $3.5m and $3.9m, and was ahead of Forsyth Barr analyst Andy Bowley's forecast for $3.7m on revenue of $83.9m.
"FY17 was a year of significant changes and challenges as Fliway restructured based on the customer loss, exited its sub-scale courier operation, changed management in the international business and got on with building the revenue line," managing director Duncan Hawkesby said. "The metrics and position of the business has altered over the past 12 months to make Fliway more robust and a stronger platform from which to build a larger business."
Last year Fliway signalled it was in for a tough ride when it lost a major customer, saying that would probably hit underlying earnings by 10 percent. That was made worse by the November earthquake in Kaikoura, which cut off the arterial freight route in the South Island, pushing up transport costs.
Hawkesby said there are still areas where the business can improve and that volatile revenue demands greater vigilance on the company's cost base, especially when volumes exceed its capacity.