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Okomu Oil Palm suffers 52% profit decline due to high cost of sales.

Okomo Oil, Nigeria’s biggest producer of crude palm oil and the second biggest producer of rubber has released its Q3-2022 results, reporting a 52% decline in pre-tax profit to N1.1 billion down from N2.3 billion recorded in Q3-21.

The result is on the back of sustained supply chain/price disruptions of CPO in the international market influenced by the Russian/Ukraine crisis.

A review of the financial statements showed that Q3-22 revenue grew by 26.99% to N9.421 billion compared to N7.419 billion in Q3-21. Despite the revenue growth, profits declined by a whopping 40% as inflation-induced rising costs set the company back.

Breakdown

Revenue: The result also showed that the growth in revenue was due to the growth in local sales (+52.37% y/y), which accounted for 89.25% of total revenue.

Gross profit margin: This shrank by 40.07% year-on-year to 50.13% in Q3-22 following faster growth in the cost of sales (+289% y/y) relative to revenue (+26.99%) y/y).

Cash flow: OKOMU generated an N22.082 billion net cash flow from operating activities in addition to the N9.995 billion it opened the year with, from where it paid loan interest and loan reimbursement.

The company’s share price: OKOMU is the 88th most traded stock on the NGX over the past three months and the share price movement has been less volatile.

Outlook: It has been an upside and downside performance over the years largely influenced by market cyclicality; CPO demand and price fluctuations, country macroeconomic changes, and policies/risks rather than production growth.

What others are saying: According to Joe Onyuike, the National President of the Oil Palm Growers Association of Nigeria, Nigeria requires about $500 million worth of palm oil to meet local demand for the commodity.

Dividends: In 2021, the company paid a dividend of N6.677 out of a PAT of N11.539 billion.

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