Timber mouldings maker Tenon believes it is past the bottom of a five-year US housing market downturn and is in better shape for a recovery than when the slump began, despite posting a loss of US$11 million ($13.4 million) for the year to June 30, up from a US$1 million loss the previous year.
The result came from revenue of US$334 million, up 2.5 per cent on the previous year, being outweighed by a 5.3 per cent rise in cost of sales, and included US$5 million of one-off restructuring costs in its US, Canadian, and New Zealand operations.
The strong New Zealand dollar was a further headwind, wiping out most of the gains from about US$7 million of cost savings achieved during the year.
The company's commentary on the result is upbeat, while acknowledging "although relative performance may have been good, absolute performance in recent times, particularly this past year, has been quite underwhelming".
"We believe the financial year just completed should prove to have been the 'dead bottom' of the cycle from a Tenon earnings perspective," said chairman Luke Moriarty and chief operating officer Tony Johnston in an annual commentary to shareholders, posted with the earnings announcement on the NZX.