Seeka lifted first-half profit 56 per cent as the biggest kiwifruit grower in Australasia enjoyed wider margins across the Tasman, but it still expects a smaller crop will see a decline in annual earnings.
Net profit climbed to $11.1 million, or 64 cents per share, in the six months ended June 30, from $7.1m, or 43 cents, a year earlier, the Te Puke-based company said in a statement. That was despite largely flat revenue of $134m, and bolstered by gains from the company's Australian fruit division. Still, Seeka anticipates a smaller New Zealand kiwifruit crop this year, with volumes down 21 per cent in the first half, and affirmed annual guidance for a 15 per cent drop in operating profit to $6.6m in calendar 2017.
"Profits are up in the first six months reflecting a strong lift in earnings in Australia and a lift in earnings from Seeka's avocado business and seasonal timing differences," chief executive Michael Franks said. "Seeka is anticipating lower operational earnings for the full financial year in 2017 reflecting a significantly lower Hayward (green) kiwifruit crop across New Zealand."
Seeka's interim report comes a day after Zespri's annual meeting in Mt Maunganui, where the kiwifruit marketer's management told grower shareholders it was working to increase returns on green varieties, squeeze more gains from the SunGold variety and develop the organic category. Zespri's also working on bringing new varieties to market.
The fruit grower today said it's still investing in fruit handling infrastructure to cope with extra SunGold volumes and an anticipated improvement in Hayward yields, and will keep expanding the Australian business, which it sees as "an important investment in diversity" as plantings mature over the coming three years.