TIDMROR
RNS Number : 6627R
Rotork PLC
04 March 2019
Rotork plc
2018 Full Year Results
OCC (2)
2018 2017 % change % change
---------- ---------- --------- ----------
Order intake(3) GBP681.7m GBP666.5m +2.3% +5.4%
Revenue GBP695.7m GBP642.2m +8.3% +11.3%
Adjusted(1) operating
profit GBP146.0m GBP130.2m +12.2% +14.8%
Adjusted(1) operating
margin 21.0% 20.3% +70bps +60bps
Profit before tax GBP120.7m GBP80.6m +49.8% +53.8%
Adjusted(1) profit before
tax GBP143.8m GBP124.8m +15.3% +17.9%
Basic earnings per share 10.5p 6.4p +64.1% +69.5%
Adjusted(1) basic earnings
per share 12.6p 10.6p +18.9% +21.7%
Full year dividend 5.90p 5.40p +9.3%
(1) Adjusted figures exclude the amortisation of acquired
intangible assets and other adjustments (see note 2).
(2) OCC is organic constant currency results excluding
acquisitions and disposals and restated at 2018 exchange rates.
(3) Order intake represents the value of orders received during
the period.
Summary
-- Strong OCC revenue growth, up 11.3%
-- Adjusted operating margin improved to 21.0%
-- ROCE increased 430bps to 29.2%
-- Cash conversion of 110.7%
-- Net cash of GBP43.6m at year end
-- Growth Acceleration Programme proceeding at pace in H2:
- 160bps improvement in working capital to sales
- Revenue per head up 7.5%; adjusted operating profits per head up 11.3%
- Supply chain improvements yielding benefits
- Centralised new product development structure
Kevin Hostetler, Chief Executive, commenting on the results,
said:
"This is a very exciting period for Rotork. We have mapped out
and are now executing a comprehensive plan to return Rotork to the
levels of growth and margin performance previously experienced by
the Group, and to do this on a sustainable basis throughout the
cycle.
"We have assembled a capable management team, comprising new and
existing talent. We have a strong balance sheet, with opportunities
to improve on an already strong track record of cash generation,
providing scope to further accelerate progress.
"Following double-digit OCC revenue growth in 2018, and mindful
of macroeconomic uncertainty, we are planning for slower growth in
2019. Based on our current assessment of project phasing, we expect
to deliver modest sales growth on an OCC basis in 2019, with lower
year on year sales in H1 reflecting the strong comparator period.
Margins will benefit from the restructuring plans under our Growth
Acceleration Programme and the implementation of additional cost
saving initiatives. Overall, we expect full year margins to show
progress on 2018."
Rotork plc Tel: +44 (0)1225 733 200
Kevin Hostetler, Chief Executive
Jonathan Davis, Finance Director
Andrew Carter, Investor Relations Director
FTI Consulting Tel: + 44(0)20 3727 1340
Nick Hasell / Susanne Yule
There will be a meeting for analysts and institutional investors
at 8.30 am GMT this morning at the offices of FTI Consulting, 200
Aldersgate, Aldersgate Street, London EC1A 4HD. The presentation
will also be webcast (audio only). Please register at
www.rotork.com.
Chairman's statement
2018 was a busy and productive year for Rotork. The Group
delivered a strong financial performance, despite an increasingly
challenging political and macroeconomic environment, and made
significant progress with a number of key strategic
initiatives.
As previously reported, towards the end of 2017 we began a
series of detailed business reviews examining our routes to market,
innovation funnel, operations footprint, global supply chain, IT
infrastructure and our talent base. Following the appointment in
March of Kevin Hostetler as Chief Executive, and the subsequent
completion of those reviews, we formulated a detailed business
plan, the objective of which is to return Rotork to the higher
levels of organic growth and operating margins previously
experienced by the business. It is an ambitious plan to be
implemented at pace, and we have termed it our Growth Acceleration
Programme.
While there has been a great deal of activity across the
business, this is not about transforming Rotork, but rather
refining how we do things, building on our strong foundations.
Kevin has assembled a strong team, with a wealth of experience in
managing such programmes. Early results in this first phase of the
multi-year programme are encouraging, with strong support for all
initiatives across the business. Kevin provides a review of the
progress made in the Growth Acceleration Programme in his
report.
Financial highlights
Order intake increased 2.3% on the prior year, or 5.4% on an OCC
basis. The strong order intake in the first quarter was partially
offset by lower order intake in the second half reflecting the
variation in the timing of project orders and deliveries compared
with 2017. Revenue increased by 8.3% to GBP695.7m (OCC +11.3%) with
the strongest revenue growth coming from the downstream oil and gas
and industrial markets. Upstream and midstream oil and gas and
water grew more modestly whilst sales to power declined.
Geographically, the strongest growth was in the Far East, with all
regions apart from the Middle East growing. The Middle East had
seen a very active upstream oil and gas market in the prior year
and these projects were not repeated in 2018.
Statutory operating profit increased by 43.0% to GBP122.9m,
adjusted operating profit increased 12.2%, or GBP15.8m, to
GBP146.0m (OCC +14.8%) with an adjusted operating margin 70 basis
points higher at 21.0% (OCC up 60 basis points at 21.1%). An
improved gross margin, increasing 60 basis points to 44.8%, and net
overhead increases below the rate of revenue growth, both
contributed to the improved adjusted operating margin. Furthermore,
initiatives to reduce working capital saw a reduction from 29.3% of
revenue in the prior year to 27.7% and the balance sheet returned
to a net cash position, with net cash of GBP43.6m at the year end.
These movements combined to produce an improved return on capital
employed of 29.2% (2017: 24.9%).
Growth Acceleration Programme
We expect the cash costs of restructuring to be largely
self-financed through working capital improvements over the course
of the Growth Acceleration Programme. Investment will be focused on
market and product segments offering the greatest scope for growth
and margin improvement, with increased investment in our front-end
commercial activities (in particular key account management), new
product development, and site services/aftermarket. Much of the
funding required for this we again expect to be self-generated
through cost efficiencies and benefits arising from the Growth
Acceleration Programme. The Board receives regular updates from
management on progress with the Growth Acceleration Programme
initiatives.
Board changes
We were delighted to welcome Kevin Hostetler to the Board on 12
February 2018 and as Chief Executive from 12 March 2018. Following
Kevin's appointment as Chief Executive, I resumed my role as
Non-Executive Chairman.
Towards the end of the year as part of our Board succession
planning, we also appointed two new Non-Executive Directors. Ann
Christin Andersen brings extensive knowledge of the oil and gas
industry and the application of new technology, most recently in
the digital space, a key focus area for Rotork. Tim Cobbold is an
experienced former CEO with a strong background in Rotork's end
markets.
In line with best governance practice, Gary Bullard,
Non-Executive Director and Chair of the Remuneration Committee, who
has been a director for almost nine years, will not stand for
re-appointment at the AGM on 26 April 2019. On behalf of the Board,
I would like to thank Gary for his invaluable contribution to
Rotork over the last nine years, in particular as Chair of the
Remuneration Committee during a period of significant change for
the Group. Tim Cobbold will assume the Chair of the Remuneration
Committee following Gary Bullard's retirement.
We have also recently welcomed Helen Barrett-Hague as our new
Group General Counsel and Company Secretary following Stephen
Jones' retirement in August 2018. Helen joins us from Pennon Group
where she was Group General Counsel and Company Secretary. Prior to
this she has held a number of senior legal and company secretary
roles and brings a wealth of experience from a number of
sectors.
Corporate Governance
The Board continues to be committed to the highest standards of
governance. During the year, the Board played a vital role in
evaluating and helping to shape the Growth Acceleration Programme.
In the second half of 2018, the Board focused on the governance
changes under the new Corporate Governance Code following its
publication in July 2018.
Dividend
Rotork is a strong cash generator, recognises the importance of
a growing dividend to its shareholders, and is committed to a
progressive dividend policy, subject to satisfying cash demands
which can vary significantly from year to year. This year the Board
recommends a final dividend of 3.7p per share, an increase of 10.4%
from the 2017 final dividend. With the 2018 interim dividend of
2.2p, the total dividend for the year is 5.9p (2017: 5.4p), a 9.3%
increase on 2017. This is equivalent to 2.1 times cover based on
adjusted earnings per share (2017: 2.0 times). The final dividend
will be payable on 22 May 2019 to shareholders on the register on
12 April 2019.
Outlook
This is a very exciting period for Rotork. We have mapped out
and are now executing a comprehensive plan to return Rotork to the
levels of growth and margin performance previously experienced by
the Group, and to do this on a sustainable basis throughout the
cycle.
We have assembled a capable management team, comprising new and
existing talent. We have a strong balance sheet, with opportunities
to improve on an already strong record of cash generation,
providing scope to further accelerate progress including through
M&A.
Following double-digit OCC revenue growth in 2018, and mindful
of macroeconomic uncertainty, we are planning for slower growth in
2019. Based on our current assessment of project phasing, we expect
to deliver modest sales growth on an OCC basis in 2019, with lower
year on year sales in H1 reflecting the strong comparator period.
Margins will benefit from the restructuring plans under our Growth
Acceleration Programme and the implementation of additional cost
saving initiatives. Overall, we expect full year margins to show
progress on 2018.
Martin Lamb
Chairman
4 March 2019
Chief Executive's statement
It gives me great pleasure to write my first annual review as
Chief Executive of Rotork and to report on a strong set of full
year results in a year of significant development for the
Group.
Having spent time getting to know the business after joining in
February, I was struck by Rotork's exceptional reputation for
quality, reliability and service, the depth of expertise and
dedication of our employees, and their willingness to drive
improvements throughout the organisation. Feedback from customers
was also very positive, but identified scope to refine how we do
things to make us easier to do business with and to maximise the
value we create for all of our stakeholders.
Following a thorough review of our routes to market, innovation
funnel, operations footprint, supply chain, talent development and
IT systems, we identified scope for improvement, validating our
five-year ambition to deliver sustainable mid-to-high single digit
revenue growth while also returning to operating margins in the
mid-20s.
We began the implementation phase of the Growth Acceleration
Programme in the second half of the year. This is the first phase
of a multi-year process, but already the results have been very
encouraging, and are testament to the calibre of our people and
their ability to execute day-to-day operations while implementing
the initiatives identified in our workstreams. Our progress and
results are especially pleasing in the context of an increasingly
challenging macroeconomic and political backdrop and with
considerable volatility in oil prices.
Financial performance
Revenue grew 8.3%, 11.3% on an organic constant currency basis.
Growth in Group order intake was 2.3% or 5.4% on an organic
constant currency basis, reflecting the variation in the timing of
project orders and deliveries compared with 2017.
Despite inflationary cost pressures, adjusted operating margins
improved 70bps to 21.0%, with new products and a greater emphasis
on cost management and productivity contributing to this.
The strength of our return on capital employed and cash flow
provides further evidence that our Growth Acceleration Programme is
beginning to yield results. Our balance sheet is strong, with a net
cash position of GBP43.6m at the year end, which will provide
firepower for our organic investment plans and flexibility to
pursue targeted M&A.
Key external drivers
2018 began with a rising oil price, leading to greater stability
and increased confidence in the oil and gas sector, which
represents just over half of our revenues. As a result, we saw a
return to more normal buying behaviour in the maintenance and
upgrade markets, and some recovery in larger projects as breakeven
costs - which continue to fall as the industry adopts newer and
more efficient technologies - became more closely aligned to the
oil price.
PMI (Purchasing Managers' Index) and GDP economic indicators
were largely supportive of steady growth in our water and
industrial markets, while our power markets continued to be
challenging, particularly in high carbon sectors such as coal fired
power applications.
Towards the end of the year the PMI/GDP data pointed to a
weakening in business sentiment and confidence and the oil price
declined. We continue to monitor developments closely.
End market focus
Our strategy continues to focus on critical applications and
higher value fluids and gasses, where the Rotork brand is strongest
and most differentiated. Although there is a long, ongoing trend
towards decarbonisation, oil & gas will continue to be our
largest and most profitable sector for the foreseeable future, due
to the complexity, critical nature of our application set and high
value of the fluids and gases. As operators seek to drive down
their costs, our product and service solutions can play a key role
in helping them to generate operating efficiencies.
We have renewed our focus on industrial applications by
realigning our approach, putting in place dedicated salespeople and
hiring distribution partners to focus on those markets. Part of our
extensive review of the business was an analysis of how we go to
market for our different types of products, and this exercise
yielded a significant number of opportunities to pursue in the
industrial market sector. Food, pharma, petrochemical and HVAC are
the largest areas in which we're gaining traction within the
industrial sector, largely to do with our more focused and
accelerated new product development efforts targeted at these
markets. These efforts have been reflected in a 14% revenue growth
in industrial applications.
Rotork Controls
GBPm 2018 2017 Change OCC(2) Change
Order intake(3) 349.2 333.0 +4.9% +8.0%
Revenue 351.9 325.2 +8.2% +11.6%
Adjusted(1) operating
profit 101.3 92.9 +9.1% +11.5%
Adjusted(1) operating
margin 28.8% 28.6% +20bps +0bps
Order intake grew 4.9% to GBP349.2m (up 8.0% on an OCC basis)
and revenue was 8.2% higher at GBP351.9m (OCC +11.6%).
This resulted in a 1.5% reduction in the order book to GBP93.6m
over the course of the year. Adjusted operating profit was
GBP101.3m which was an 9.1% increase, giving an adjusted operating
margin of 28.8%, 20 basis points higher than the prior year. On an
OCC basis adjusted operating margin is the same as the prior year.
Gross margin improved 30 basis points to 52.2% largely due to
operational gearing.
Oil and gas revenues grew strongly in the year driven by the
large downstream projects in the Far East which we highlighted at
the half year results. In total, oil and gas increased from 44% of
divisional revenues to 50%, with downstream increasing from 29% of
divisional sales to 36%. Industrial process was the only other end
market to grow and did so both in value terms (+17%) and as a
percentage of the division's sales (up 1% to 17%). Power and water
sales both declined overall but increased in some regions, with
North American power and Latin American water providing the two
best performances within these end markets. Service activities
continued to perform well.
We saw the most positive growth from the Far East which, even
without the benefit of the large downstream projects, would have
been the fastest growing region. North America, Western Europe and
Latin America also made progress. The UK and Eastern Europe were
broadly flat whilst the Middle East and Africa saw a decline
against their 2017 comparator, which benefited from a number of
upstream oil and gas and power projects.
During 2018 we led initiatives focused on lean manufacturing,
product line rationalisation and supply chain consolidation. We
implemented a new lean assembly methodology in part of our Bath
plant which has already delivered quality and efficiency
improvements in the year - and which, once fully established, will
be rolled out across our other plants. We have reviewed our product
ranges and notified customers of 12 product lines which have now
been discontinued, with a further three to follow in 2019. In most
cases these customers have been successfully migrated to newer
product ranges. The new procurement team has been working on both
our direct and indirect cost base. Whilst the impact on our 2018
costs is not significant, they have been laying the groundwork for
delivery of savings in 2019.
Rotork Fluid Systems
GBPm 2018 2017 Change OCC(2) Change
Order intake(3) 154.7 160.1 -3.3% +0.9%
Revenue 166.3 150.1 +10.8% +14.2%
Adjusted(1) operating
profit 16.1 9.0 +78.9% +85.6%
Adjusted(1) operating
margin 9.7% 6.0% +370bps +380bps
Fluid Systems saw strong project activity early in the year and
as a result was able to convert a large part of this to
revenue.
Order intake of GBP154.7m was 0.9% higher on an OCC basis than
the prior year but a currency headwind and the sale of the Hiller
nuclear actuator business meant reported order intake was 3.3%
lower. Revenue was 10.8% higher (+14.2% OCC) and as a result
adjusted operating profit increased 78.9% (OCC +85.6%) to GBP16.1m.
Adjusted operating margin increased 370 basis points to 9.7% (OCC
+380bps). Gross margin improved 280 basis points to 31.7% as the
higher revenue was delivered from a lower direct cost base, as well
as benefiting from a small improvement in material costs.
Oil and gas was the fastest growing end market and is now 68% of
Fluid System's sales compared with 67% last year. Within this,
midstream was broadly flat and upstream, the largest element, grew
7% with progress in North America and the Far East offset by a
decline in the Middle East. Downstream grew 34% led by activity in
the Middle East. Water and industrial process both showed modest
progress but power declined, partly due the sale of Hiller.
The Far East grew in nearly all end markets and was the best
performing region although is still smaller than North America and
the Middle East and Africa overall. North America, Western Europe
and Eastern Europe all made progress in the year with Western
Europe's performance strongest in industrial process. The Middle
East and Africa and UK markets, both declined in the year, largely
as a result of lower upstream business.
Operational improvement initiatives focused on Lucca, Italy
during the year. Introduction of lean techniques, consistent with
the overall methodology being deployed across the Group, were
supplemented by a drive to reduce inventory. From a product
perspective there has been a balance between new and expanded
product lines, notably the electro-hydraulic SI range, and a
rationalisation of the existing product ranges with eight low
volume ranges being phased out.
Rotork Gears
GBPm 2018 2017 Change OCC(2) Change
Order intake(3) 86.8 86.1 +0.9% +3.8%
Revenue 85.6 83.9 +2.0% +4.7%
Adjusted(1) operating
profit 15.3 15.7 -2.7% +1.3%
Adjusted(1) operating
margin 17.9% 18.7% -80bps -70bps
Order intake increased 0.9% (OCC +3.8%) to GBP86.8m whilst
revenue of GBP85.6m was 2.0% ahead of last year (OCC +4.7%).
Adjusted operating profit was GBP15.3m, 2.7% lower than the
prior year but was +1.3% on an OCC basis. Adjusted operating
margins were 17.9%, 80 basis points lower than 2017. Gross margin
reduced 160 basis points to 32.2% driven by higher material costs
which were the result of higher warranty costs and material
write-offs. These adverse impacts were partially offset by
reductions in overheads through the year.
Oil and gas sales grew the fastest and increased from 52% of
divisional sales last year to 54%. The growth was in midstream in
the Middle East and downstream in North America and the Far East
whilst Western Europe was lower in both the end markets. Upstream
activity was lower in most regions. Industrial process was the
other growth market, led by North America, with water and power
broadly flat. The Middle East and Africa and Far East were the two
regions which grew sales whilst Western Europe reported the largest
decline. All other regions reported similar activity levels to the
prior year.
Early in the year we undertook a review of the division's
products and took the decision to rationalise the product range in
a number of areas. The closure of our Valvekits business mid-year
was the most visible result of this but a number of low volume
product lines with obvious replacements were also phased out. This
exercise continues and we expect to consolidate more ranges in 2019
which will deliver further inventory reductions and simplify our
product portfolio. At the same time the reorganisation of R&D
and coordination at a Group level is allowing us to focus on
development of gearboxes that primarily sell to Controls and Fluid
Systems to improve the efficiency of the product pairing and
competitiveness of the solution.
Rotork Instruments
GBPm 2018 2017 Change OCC(2) Change
Order intake(3) 105.5 104.5 +0.9% +1.9%
Revenue 107.2 100.6 +6.5% +7.5%
Adjusted(1) operating
profit 24.1 20.5 +17.7% +17.5%
Adjusted(1) operating
margin 22.5% 20.3% +220bps +190bps
Order intake was GBP105.5m, 0.9% higher than last year (OCC
+1.9%) and revenue of GBP107.2m was 6.5% higher (OCC +7.5%).
The additional revenue combined with tight control of costs
ensured adjusted operating profit grew 17.7% (OCC +17.5%) to
GBP24.1m with adjusted operating margins increasing 220 basis
points (OCC +190 bps) to 22.5%. Gross margin improved 110 basis
points to 44.3% with the positive impact of operational gearing
combined with holding direct costs at the prior year level more
than offsetting a small rise in material costs.
Oil and gas remains the largest end market and increased from
46% to 48% of revenue this year. This growth comes from upstream
and midstream oil and gas sales as downstream reduced in the year,
falling from 12% to 10% of revenue. Water and power delivered
modest growth and whilst Industrial sales grew, they declined as a
percentage of sales from 19% to 18%. Geographically most regions
maintained their share of divisional revenue, growing in-line with
the overall division. The only exception was the UK which grew
faster, benefiting from upstream oil and gas sales.
Our focus on driving efficiency improvements included product
rationalisation, where we have withdrawn over 2,500 SKUs covering
more than 20 product ranges. At the same time new product
development plays a major role as we look to match our customers'
changing needs. Our new chemical pump range for the oil and gas
market offers major efficiency savings, with reduced power
requirements which is ideal for growing solar applications. With
the reshaped Group engineering structure, we were able to close a
small remote engineering centre, driving cost savings without
impacting our ability to innovate.
Growth Acceleration Programme
Our Growth Acceleration Programme, while wide-ranging, is not
about the fundamental reinvention of Rotork but rather about
refinements that build upon the Group's strong foundations, through
people, processes and systems. An overview of our progress is
outlined below.
The themes of the programme include:
-- Reinvesting in our customer focus and intimacy;
-- Driving operational and supply chain efficiencies;
-- Improving our processes and focus within our Innovation and
New Product Development activities;
-- Enhancing our talent acquisition and development programmes;
-- Increasing the alignment between our long-term strategy, our
near-term goals and our desired behaviours and our rewards
systems;
-- A renewed emphasis on headcount productivity; and,
-- A critical review of our strategy, portfolio and current product lines.
We identified 12 distinct initiatives and grouped these within
four pillars, with an underlying drive to simplify our business and
to improve the quality of our portfolio through an evaluation of
our strategy, portfolio and product lines. The four pillars are
defined as Commercial Excellence, Operational Excellence, Talent
Acquisition and Development, and IT & Core Business
Processes.
We have made very good progress, and are on track with all of
the initiatives and plans announced at our half year results.
Having previously recorded a seven year decline in revenue and
profit per employee, our productivity has now begun to recover. We
added a net 31 to our headcount in the last year (equating to a
0.8% growth) yet grew the revenue by 8.3%. Revenue per head has
therefore improved 7.5% to GBP180k per head and adjusted operating
profit per head 11.3% to GBP38k per head.
1) Commercial Excellence
Focus on providing our customers with the products and services
they want whilst at the same time making it simple for them to buy
from Rotork wherever they are in the world. While happy with many
aspects of Rotork's performance, customers singled out in their
feedback to us three areas for improvement, which we have worked
hard to address: quote turnaround times, on-time delivery and
client communications.
Route to market
One of the most significant conclusions from the programme has
been a recognition of the need to migrate from Rotork's
product-based structure to an organisation that is more closely
aligned to market segments and customer needs.
Several of our fastest growing geographical markets already work
partially in this way, and in 2019 we will begin a phased, region
by region roll-out, which we expect to have completed in 2020. The
approach - whereby team members are tasked with providing solutions
to customers, irrespective of the historical division responsible
for that product - will be supported by a greater emphasis on key
account management and end user engagement, and a renewed drive to
be easier for customers to do business with. Our key account
managers currently focus on 15 of our largest oil and gas end users
and the most active international engineering contractors. The key
account team has been able to adapt to the end users' business
requirements and improve relationships with key influencers and
decisions makers in customers' procurement, operations and projects
departments.
Development of service offering
A core element of our commercial excellence pillar relates to
site services, identified in our customer research as a key
differentiator for the Group.
This is an area we intend to expand as we continue our migration
from a reactive service model to proactive preventative
maintenance, and ultimately to the utilisation of real-time data
analytics to predict failures and prevent them from occurring in
the first place. We have recruited a new Global Director of Site
Services, who has a depth of experience in running major service
networks, and bolstered the team through the addition of 45
customer-facing service technicians.
Innovation and new product development
Work under the commercial excellence pillar also included a
detailed review of our structure and processes for innovation and
new product development.
Previously, each division was responsible for its own new
product development and had its own budget. We now have a central
structure, led by our Group Director of Innovation and Engineering,
with areas of expertise including electrical engineering, software
engineering and data analytics. The introduction of a revised
framework for assessing new product development efforts led to the
elimination of 35% of in-flight product development programmes that
were not deemed to be sufficiently value-enhancing to Rotork.
We now have a consolidated database of all ongoing programmes,
and are able to concentrate our resources on the most promising and
profitable areas. We have also changed our approach to accelerate
our new product development cycle.
In addition, we evaluated our engineering capabilities against
those required for our future success and put in place a plan to
strengthen those required competencies through building, partnering
or acquiring them where we identified gaps. Our intention in the
short-term is to keep investment in innovation and R&D to
around 2018 levels, but to use our expenditure more efficiently,
by:
-- improving our process for project selection;
-- accelerating our process cycle times; and
-- increasing our hit rate through improved customer and supplier input early in the process.
All of these activities are supported by a robust set of
management KPIs to monitor and drive improvements in our ongoing
new product development effectiveness. Once improved processes and
tighter focus have been embedded, we will re-evaluate the quality
of projects in our innovation funnel and assess our levels of
investment accordingly.
2) Operational Excellence
Improve our operational efficiency through the use of
mixed-model lean techniques, improved inventory management and
footprint optimisation with supply chain globalisation delivering
cost savings and whilst maintaining our reputation for high-quality
products and services.
Operational improvements
Performance improvement reviews have now been carried out at the
largest nine sites covering over 70% of our factory output and
improvement plans developed for each. These plans have already
delivered improvements in productivity, quality and lead times.
Initially facilitated by external support, the review process
has now been internalised and in 2019 will be extended to drive
further improvement initiatives and sharing of best practices. The
Rotork lean model is another improvement initiative which has now
been launched and the training materials deployed. Work to embed
this commenced at the end of 2018. In parallel the Rotork inventory
management module was launched in the last quarter of the year.
Plans have been created for every site and targets set. A set of
operational KPIs has been developed to track all these
initiatives.
Supply chain improvements
The review of our supply chain carried out last year indicated
that through centralisation of what was a fragmented and locally
managed supply base there was significant potential for
savings.
We have now created the central team that will lead this work
and have been very pleased with the progress so far. Wave 1 focused
on travel, insurance and certain product components and was
completed last year. Wave 2 is focused on more significant
component categories and commenced in the final quarter of 2018.
The new agreements will gradually be phased in during 2019 and are
expected to yield a benefit of around GBP5m in 2019.
3) Talent acquisition & development
Having the right team in place is crucial to achieving our
aspirations. Through a combination of targeted development of
existing employees, recruitment of world-class external talent and
a re-alignment between our strategy, behaviours, results and
rewards systems, we have already delivered promising results in
driving towards our ambitions and have a clear roadmap to make
further progress.
Global talent development
Following assessment of our senior leaders we were prompted to
fill skill gaps, through internal training or externally through
hiring, improving our capabilities particularly in Operations and
Procurement.
Leaders have now been hired for our General Counsel,
Procurement, Communications, Talent, Strategy & M&A and
Site Service functions. The Talent Review and Succession Planning
processes initially provided by consultants have now been
internalised to enable us to deliver them ourselves as we move
forward.
Performance management
A Performance Management and Objective Setting approach has been
launched which will be applied globally, providing total alignment
to our Vision and setting the standard for what high performance
looks like.
With our new Performance Approach as a foundation we have been
able to adjust our variable and fixed compensation programmes to
include differentiation between high and lower performers and have
announced a new annual cycle for compensation.
4) IT & core business processes
IT systems development
At the end of 2018 we appointed our partner to work with us on
the design and development of our new core IT systems.
These will go beyond the ERP system and will incorporate CRM,
project tracking and global HR systems. This integrated development
has now started and will be deployed in phases with some aspects
going live in 2019, although ultimately this is a multi-year
programme before all sites are operating on a common platform.
IT team development
The system development programme of work is significant and it
is vital that we have the right people with the appropriate skills
to lead the programme.
In recognition of this, the IT team has been strengthened with
additional enterprise architecture and project management resources
particularly. The training and development of the wider team has
also been increased, focused on the skills that will be most
relevant to the system development programme.
Dashboards
In order to support the business through a period of change, we
need to be able to track and measure the improvements. To deliver a
consistent and visible set of KPIs we have developed dashboards for
some of our key focus areas. Dashboards for Rotork Site Services,
Global Operations and Customer Quote Responsiveness were launched
in 2018. These dashboards operate independently from our underlying
systems and will provide us with a consistent set of data as we
roll out our new core ERP system.
Strategy, portfolio and product line assessment
The four pillars outlined above are supported by our Strategy,
Portfolio and Product Line Assessment activities. The initial
assessment of our portfolio identified three business areas that
were candidates for immediate exit, given that they were dilutive
to Group margins, yet accounted for only 1% of Group revenue. These
were exited in 2018. An extensive product review also identified
more than 28 product lines with low sales volumes, dilutive margins
or both. These added a great deal of complexity to the business,
and will be withdrawn from production over the course of 2019.
Sales from these are being transferred to alternative products, in
most cases to newer generations, within the core portfolio.
Growth Acceleration Programme financial impact
The sale of the Hiller nuclear actuator business, closure of the
Valvekits business and the engineering office resulted in a GBP0.7m
loss. This has been reported as a restructuring cost within other
adjustments and is excluded from adjusted operating profit. During
2018 these business contributed GBP3.1m of revenue and operating
profit of GBP0.1m and their disposal generated proceeds of
GBP4.3m.
The central procurement team was established in the middle of
last year and added to through the second half of 2018. Work
started on the wave 1 (insurance, travel and certain components)
early in the year but then towards the end of the year focus moved
to wave 2 (larger component categories) that would bring benefits
in 2019. In total this team has achieved GBP1.7m of in-year savings
which benefited the 2018 results. The impact of these savings in
2019 plus the impact of wave 2 will generate an incremental GBP5m
of savings in 2019.
The implementation of a mixed-model lean programme and focus on
continuous improvement was led initially by consultants. Gradually
through the year we have built the in-house expertise in these
areas and are now able to run the site assessment process and drive
further improvements led by our own people. Of the GBP4.1m
consultancy costs incurred in 2018, which are reported within
'Other adjustments' and excluded from adjusted operating profit,
the majority were incurred in the first half of the year and relate
to the information gathering and analysis phase of the Growth
Acceleration Programme. However GBP0.7m related to site improvement
activities and the benefits arising from these activities in 2018
have been in two main areas. Firstly the identification and use of
slow moving inventory, which has generated GBP0.7m of additional
profit, and secondly the efficiency gains from process changes the
most significant part of which are reflected in improved labour
utilisation. The efficiency gains, which totalled circa GBP0.4m in
2018, are recurring benefits and will continue to build as these
programmes gain momentum.
The other costs incurred in 2018 as part of the Growth
Acceleration Programme are redundancy and executive change costs
(GBP2.9m) and restructuring costs (GBP2.9m). These include the
write-off of capitalised R&D following the decision to end
development of certain product lines and assets written off as part
of the global footprint review. There is no direct payback in
respect of these costs.
Our intention when establishing the Growth Acceleration
Programme was to fund the programme through working capital
improvements. During the year we have begun to see some of those
improvements with net working capital reducing from 29.3% to 27.7%
of revenue. Inventory is the component of working capital which has
received the most focus and an improvement in stock turns has
generated GBP16m this year. Looking at the other elements of
working capital on a constant currency basis, trade receivables
have improved and generated GBP5m whilst trade payables have
deteriorated slightly resulting in an outflow of GBP9m. As the
central procurement team start to work through the wave 2
categories we expect to see this metric start to improve. The total
cash generated from improved working capital in the year is
GBP13m.
Capital deployment strategy
We remain a highly cash generative business and have returned to
a net cash position. The priorities for use of our cash continue to
be investing in organic growth (new markets, new product
development or capital expenditure), then a progressive dividend
policy, followed by M&A. Thereafter, if we decide at any point
we have excess cash, we would look to return it to shareholders. We
have a strong balance sheet which provides the Group with
considerable optionality in uncertain market conditions.
With the hiring of our new Group Director of Strategy and
M&A, we will further refine Rotork's strategy and will take our
time to make sure we understand where Rotork has its most
attractive opportunities for growth before pursuing acquisitions.
We have enough medium to low hanging fruit to keep the team focused
on delivering in the near term, such as supply chain and
operational improvements, facility consolidations and pivoting our
commercial organisation. There's a lot of work to be done, and we
intend to stay focused on the Growth Acceleration Programme
initiatives whilst we evaluate M&A targets.
Stakeholder engagement
People and culture
We recognise that there are several factors critical to the
success of our Growth Acceleration Programme and internal
communication is one of these. In order to ensure that we manage
our programme effectively, we have hired a Director of Internal
Communications and focused on communication throughout the
organisation to ensure that we bring our team along. We've created
new messaging for the company consistent with our areas of focus:
six key themes for the business, our vision, mission, and what we
define as a good company. We have also produced several internal
CEO videos to communicate where we're going and what we need. Our
new One Rotork theme is about working collaboratively and behaving
as a single collective company.
In addition to tackling structural inefficiencies, there was a
need to build upon Rotork's strong culture by introducing more of
an operational performance mindset. Our training and development
work, changes to the performance management system, our business
intelligence dashboards and the external operating talent we have
brought in have all contributed to a renewed focus on operational
metrics.
We did not undertake a formal employee engagement survey in 2018
as we wanted to allow time for the changes to bed in. Feedback from
our town halls, dedicated email address for people to ask me
questions, and my lunches with colleagues of differing seniority
throughout Rotork demonstrate a real sense of excitement, optimism
and renewed energy around the business.
Customer satisfaction
We have acted upon the feedback from the c. 200 customer
interviews and first net promoter score assessment we undertook
last year, seeking to build on our strengths and address the areas
where our performance fell short of expectations. As I mentioned
above, both our lead times and quote turn-around times have
improved significantly over the last year.
Our communities
Corporate social responsibility remains core to our business
model. Our CSR Committee considers the impact of our business on
all our stakeholders and ways to improve our performance. This year
we reviewed the charities we have been supporting and have now
chosen areas that are more aligned to our business focus. We
continue to work with Water Aid, but are pleased to have added
Engineers Without Borders, Pump Aid and Renewable World to the
causes we support with fundraising and volunteer resource.
Summary
We have made significant progress with our Growth Acceleration
Programme, but this is only the beginning of a multi-year
initiative.
Under the commercial excellence pillar, we are focused on
creating a more customer-oriented structure, which is ongoing and
will take a year to execute, since we are taking great care to
implement this in a measured, considered way.
Under the operational excellence pillar of our Growth
Acceleration Programme, our facility rationalisations are underway
and on track. We have identified a specific set of initiatives to
be driven by our nine largest facilities, and our largest
subsidiary locations have teams focused on driving tangible
operational improvements, including inventory optimisation to
improve our cash generation.
We will begin rolling out elements of our new IT platform within
the next 6 months.
Essentially, our current focus is on advancing the initiatives
we have already started to implement.
Whilst the macroeconomic outlook is difficult to predict, we are
proactively planning for different scenarios and have a very good
understanding of what we would do under different circumstances.
After a very good performance in 2018 which exceeded our
expectations, aided by a reduction in lead times, we expect
revenues for 2019 to deliver modest OCC growth on 2018. However our
self-help initiatives should mean that we see progress on margins
in 2019. Whatever unfolds, the initiatives we are pursuing will
strengthen Rotork's cyclical resilience and position the Group to
compete effectively in all economic contexts.
I am confident that we can continue to build upon what is a
strong foundation. I see clear opportunities and potential for
Rotork. It is an honour to be steering the Group through the next
stage of its development as a leading global flow control and
instrumentation company, capitalising on Rotork's proud history
while positioning the organisation for sustainable growth. I would
like to thank my colleagues throughout the Group for their drive
and enthusiasm in embracing the Growth Acceleration Programme.
There is a lot to do, and we have a great team in place to achieve
our goals.
Financial Review
Return on capital employed (ROCE)
Our capital-efficient business model and strong profit margins
mean Rotork generates a high ROCE. Our definition of ROCE is based
on adjusted operating profit as a return on the average net assets
excluding net cash and the pension scheme liability, net of the
related deferred tax. This means that as we make acquisitions our
capital base grows when the associated intangible assets and
goodwill are recognised. The average capital employed decreased
4.3% over the year to GBP500m as there were no acquisitions during
2018 and we moved from a net debt to a net cash position. This,
combined with the higher adjusted operating profit, resulted in an
increase in ROCE to 29.2% (2017: 24.9%).
Taxation
The Group's effective tax rate was mainly impacted this year by
the reduction in US corporate tax rates. The headline rate
decreased from 31.0% to 24.0% in 2018 as a result of non-taxable
charges in 2017 not repeated in 2018. Removing the impact of the
non-recurring adjustments provides a more reliable measure and on
this basis the adjusted effective tax rate is 23.7% (2017: 26.3%).
The Group expects its adjusted effective tax rate to continue to
fall in line with the current trend in corporate tax rates where
Rotork operates. This will still be higher than the standard UK
rate due to higher rates of tax in China, the US, Canada, France,
Germany, Italy, Japan and India.
The Group's approach to tax continues to be to operate on the
basis of full disclosure and co-operation with all tax authorities
and, where possible, to mitigate the burden of tax within the local
legislation.
Cash generation
Our strong cash generation resulted in a movement from net debt
of GBP12.6m to net cash of GBP43.6m at the end of the year. Our
cash conversion KPI shows a conversion of 110.7% of adjusted
operating profit into cash. The Group invested GBP10.4m in capital
expenditure in 2018 although this was lower than anticipated due to
our decision to defer plans for the redevelopment of the Bath
factory site whilst options were considered. We continue to look at
options for further expansion of this facility as part of the
Growth Acceleration Programme.
We have continued to invest in our engineering capability with
our Research and Development cash spend increasing 10.8% to
GBP15.5m. This represents 2.2% of revenue (2017: GBP14.0m and
2.2%). The most significant spend was associated with the
development of Pakscan 4 which contributed a third of the GBP3.8m
of capitalised R&D in the year. Cash of GBP4.3m has been
realised from the disposal of the Hiller business and the Valvekits
assets. Dividends of GBP48.3m and tax payments of GBP30.1m were the
two other major outflows.
Control of working capital as defined in the cash flow
statement, using average exchange rates and excluding acquisitions,
is key to achieving our cash generation KPI. The increased levels
of revenue in the last quarter saw trade receivables grow GBP2.3m
and when measured as days sales outstanding improved from 63 to 62
days.
Net working capital in the balance sheet decreased to 27.7% of
revenue compared with 29.3% in December 2017 but was a GBP9.0m
outflow in the cash flow statement.
Retirement benefits
The Group accounts for post-retirement benefits in accordance
with IAS 19, Employee Benefits. The balance sheet reflects the net
deficit of these schemes at 31 December 2018 based on the market
value of the assets at that date, and the valuation of liabilities
using year end AA corporate bond yields. We closed both the main
defined benefit pension schemes to new entrants; the UK scheme in
2003 and the US scheme in 2009 in order to reduce the risk of
volatility of the Group's liabilities. During 2018 we further
reduced the risk of volatility when we completed the closure to
future accrual of both the UK and US schemes. Members of the
defined benefit schemes have been transferred onto the relevant
defined contribution plan operating in their country. The closure
of both of these schemes has resulted in a curtailment gain in
other income of GBP8.6m and is an adjusting item in the adjusted
profit measure.
The High Court judgement in the case of Lloyds Banking Group in
October 2018 clarified that pension benefits under the UK Scheme
need to be equalised for the effects of unequal guaranteed minimum
pensions (GMP). The impact of GMP equalisation is a GBP0.9m cost
and is shown as a past service cost in the income statement and is
an adjusting item in the adjusted profit measure.
The most recent triennial valuation of the UK scheme took place
as at 31 March 2016 and showed an actuarial deficit of GBP32.5m and
a funding level of 82%. The update to this actuarial valuation at
31 March 2018 showed the deficit had grown to GBP41.5m and funding
level decreased slightly to 81%. A continued reduction in gilt
yields, which is the key driver behind the value of the scheme's
liabilities, and higher inflation expectations were the main
changes since the 2016 valuation. A recovery plan was agreed with
the Trustees following the 2016 valuation, resulting in required
annual contributions from the Company of GBP5.5m during 2016, 2017
and 2018. The next triennial valuation will be prepared as at 31
March 2019.
On an accounting basis the deficit on the schemes decreased from
GBP48.2m to GBP27.3m during the year and the funding level
increased from 80% to 87%. In addition to the curtailment gains,
GMP cost and contributions of GBP7.2m, the increase in the discount
rate from 2.5% to 3.0% also contributed to the GBP20.9m reduction
in the pension deficit.
The accounting deficit is different to the actuarial deficit as
on an accounting basis we are required to use AA corporate bond
rates to value the liabilities. The actuarial valuation uses gilt
yields since this most closely matches the investment strategy
which is designed in part to hedge the interest rate and inflation
risks borne by the scheme. Cash contributions are driven by the
actuarial valuation.
Kevin Hostetler
Chief Executive
4 March 2019
Consolidated income statement
For the year ended 31 December 2018
2018 2017
Notes GBP000 GBP000
-------------------------------------------------- ----- --------- -----------
Revenue 3 695,713 642,229
Cost of sales (384,253) (358,090)
-------------------------------------------------- ----- --------- -----------
Gross profit 311,460 284,139
Other income 8,990 10,651
Distribution costs (7,260) (6,271)
Administrative expenses (189,474) (202,233)
Other expenses (798) (314)
-------------------------------------------------- ----- --------- -----------
Adjusted operating profit 2,3 146,015 130,162
Adjustments
* Amortisation of acquired intangible assets 3 (20,284) (27,183)
* Other adjustments 4 (2,813) (17,007)
-------------------------------------------------- ----- --------- -----------
Operating profit 2,3 122,918 85,972
Finance income 5 2,278 1,381
Finance expense 5 (4,448) (6,767)
-------------------------------------------------- ----- --------- -----------
Profit before tax 120,748 80,586
Income tax expense 6 (29,004) (24,973)
-------------------------------------------------- ----- --------- -----------
Profit for the year 91,744 55,613
-------------------------------------------------- ----- --------- -----------
Basic earnings per share 8 10.5p 6.4p
Adjusted basic earnings per share 8 12.6p 10.6p
Diluted earnings per share 8 10.5p 6.4p
Adjusted diluted earnings per share 8 12.6p 10.5p
-------------------------------------------------- ----- --------- ---------
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income
For the year ended 31 December 2018
2018 2017
GBP000 GBP000
---------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Profit for the year 91,744 55,613
Other comprehensive income
Items that may be subsequently reclassified to the
income statement:
Foreign exchange translation differences 3,164 (376)
Effective portion of changes in fair value of cash
flow hedges net of tax (6) 6,188
----------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
3,158 5,812
Items that are not subsequently reclassified to the
income statement:
Actuarial gain in pension scheme net of tax 8,055 3,709
----------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Income and expenses recognised directly in equity 11,213 9,521
Total comprehensive income for the year 102,957 65,134
----------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Consolidated balance sheet
At 31 December 2018
2018 2017
Notes GBP000 GBP000
-------------------------------------- ----- ------- -------
Non-current assets
Goodwill 230,157 228,028
Intangible assets 61,517 81,456
Property, plant and equipment 79,338 81,725
Deferred tax assets 17,337 21,218
Other receivables 352 142
-------------------------------------- ----- ------- -------
Total non-current assets 388,701 412,569
Current assets
Inventories 94,739 91,908
Trade receivables 145,509 145,529
Current tax 1,429 2,726
Derivative financial instruments 308 3,468
Other receivables 23,161 19,202
Cash and cash equivalents 104,489 63,192
-------------------------------------- ----- ------- -------
Total current assets 369,635 326,025
-------------------------------------- ----- ------- -------
Total assets 758,336 738,594
-------------------------------------- ----- ------- -------
Equity
Issued equity capital 7 4,358 4,352
Share premium 13,024 11,193
Reserves 35,421 32,263
Retained earnings 460,825 409,392
-------------------------------------- ----- ------- -------
Total equity 513,628 457,200
-------------------------------------- ----- ------- -------
Non-current liabilities
Interest bearing loans and borrowings 30,871 45,879
Employee benefits 9 31,274 52,293
Deferred tax liabilities 15,722 19,379
Derivative financial instruments - 245
Provisions 10 2,149 1,929
Total non-current liabilities 80,016 119,725
Current liabilities
Interest bearing loans and borrowings 30,010 29,928
Trade payables 47,332 49,183
Employee benefits 9 26,489 21,464
Current tax 11,792 13,093
Derivative financial instruments 2,682 1,521
Other payables 40,150 42,165
Provisions 10 6,237 4,315
-------------------------------------- ----- ------- -------
Total current liabilities 164,692 161,669
-------------------------------------- ----- ------- -------
Total liabilities 244,708 281,394
-------------------------------------- ----- ------- -------
Total equity and liabilities 758,336 738,594
-------------------------------------- ----- ------- -------
These financial statements were approved by the Board of
Directors on 4 March 2019 and were signed on its behalf by:
KG Hostetler and JM Davis, Directors.
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
Issued Capital
equity Share Translation redemption Hedging Retained
capital Premium Reserve reserve Reserve Earnings Total
GBP000 GBP000 GBP000 GBP000 GBP000 GBP000 GBP000
------------------------------------- -------- -------- ----------- ----------- -------- --------- --------
Balance at 31 December 2016 4,350 10,482 32,142 1,644 (7,335) 392,803 434,086
Profit for the year - - - - - 55,613 55,613
Other comprehensive income
------------------------------------- -------- -------- ----------- ----------- -------- --------- --------
Foreign exchange translation
differences - - (376) - - - (376)
Effective portion of changes
in fair value of cash
flow hedges - - - - 7,546 - 7,546
Actuarial loss on defined benefit
pension plans - - - - - 5,849 5,849
Tax on other comprehensive income - - - - (1,358) (2,140) (3,498)
Total other comprehensive income - - (376) - 6,188 3,709 9,521
------------------------------------- -------- -------- ----------- ----------- -------- --------- --------
Total comprehensive income - - (376) - 6,188 59,322 65,134
Transactions with owners, recorded
directly in equity
Equity settled share-based payments
transactions - - - - - 1,089 1,089
Tax on equity settled share-based
payment transactions - - - - - 252 252
Share options exercised by employees 2 711 - - - - 713
Own ordinary shares acquired - - - - - (1,157) (1,157)
Own ordinary shares awarded
under share schemes - - - - - 2,301 2,301
Dividends - - - - - (45,218) (45,218)
------------------------------------- -------- -------- ----------- ----------- -------- --------- --------
Balance at 31 December 2017 4,352 11,193 31,766 1,644 (1,147) 409,392 457,200
Profit for the year - - - - - 91,744 91,744
Other comprehensive income
------------------------------------- -------- -------- ----------- ----------- -------- --------- --------
Foreign exchange translation
differences - - 3,164 - - - 3,164
Effective portion of changes
in fair value of cash
flow hedges - - - - (24) - (24)
Actuarial gain on defined benefit
pension plans - - - - - 9,501 9,501
Tax on other comprehensive income - - - - 18 (1,446) (1,428)
Total other comprehensive income - - 3,164 - (6) 8,055 11,213
------------------------------------- -------- -------- ----------- ----------- -------- --------- --------
Total comprehensive income - - 3,164 - (6) 99,799 102,957
Transactions with owners, recorded
directly in equity
Equity settled share-based payments
transactions - - - - - 2,457 2,457
Tax on equity settled share-based
payment transactions - - - - - 98 98
Share options exercised by employees 6 1,831 - - - - 1,837
Own ordinary shares acquired - - - - - (4,850) (4,850)
Own ordinary shares awarded
under share schemes - - - - - 2,217 2,217
Dividends - - - - - (48,288) (48,288)
------------------------------------- -------- -------- ----------- ----------- -------- --------- --------
Balance at 31 December 2018 4,358 13,024 34,930 1,644 (1,153) 460,825 513,628
------------------------------------- -------- -------- ----------- ----------- -------- --------- --------
Detailed explanations for equity capital, the translation
reserve, capital redemption reserve and hedging reserve can be seen
in note 7.
Consolidated statement of cash flows
For the year ended 31 December 2018
2018 2018 2017 2017
Notes GBP000 GBP000 GBP000 GBP000
------------------------------------------------ ----- -------- -------- -------- --------
Cash flows from operating activities
Profit for the year 91,744 55,613
Adjustments for:
Amortisation of intangibles 20,284 27,183
Other adjustments 4 2,813 17,007
Amortisation of development costs 2,575 2,699
Depreciation 11,642 12,232
Equity settled share-based payment expense 4,674 3,390
Profit on sale of property, plant and equipment (134) (147)
Finance income (2,278) (1,381)
Finance expense 4,448 6,767
Income tax expense 29,004 24,973
------------------------------------------------ ----- -------- -------- -------- --------
164,772 148,336
Increase in inventories (2,140) (7,390)
Increase in trade and other receivables (2,322) (13,172)
(Decrease)/increase in trade and other
payables (5,761) 6,926
Restructuring costs paid (7,795) (2,775)
Difference between pension charge and cash
contribution (5,809) (4,782)
Increase in provisions 2,333 147
Increase in employee benefits 4,690 7,158
------------------------------------------------ ----- -------- -------- -------- --------
147,968 134,448
Income taxes paid (30,084) (28,243)
------------------------------------------------ ----- -------- -------- -------- --------
Cash flows from operating activities 117,884 106,205
Investing activities
Purchase of property, plant and equipment (10,430) (12,457)
Development costs capitalised (3,831) (3,356)
Sale of property, plant and equipment 201 2,450
Disposal of businesses 4,340 -
Contingent consideration paid (10) (1,347)
Settlement of hedging derivatives (815) 662
Interest received 1,309 1,191
------------------------------------------------ ----- -------- -------- -------- --------
Cash flows from investing activities (9,236) (12,857)
Financing activities
Issue of ordinary share capital 1,837 713
Own ordinary shares acquired (4,850) (1,157)
Interest paid (2,837) (2,975)
Decrease in bank loans (14,934) (40,579)
Repayment of finance lease liabilities (3) (68)
Dividends paid on ordinary shares (48,288) (45,218)
------------------------------------------------ ----- -------- -------- -------- --------
Cash flows from financing activities (69,075) (89,284)
------------------------------------------------ ----- -------- -------- -------- --------
Increase in cash and cash equivalents 39,573 4,064
Cash and cash equivalents at 1 January 63,192 61,423
Effect of exchange rate fluctuations on
cash held 1,724 (2,295)
------------------------------------------------ ----- -------- -------- -------- --------
Cash and cash equivalents at 31 December 104,489 63,192
------------------------------------------------ ----- -------- -------- -------- --------
Notes to the Group Financial Statements
For the year ended 31 December 2018
Except where indicated, values in these notes are in GBP000.
Rotork plc is a company domiciled in England. The consolidated
financial statements of the Company for the year ended 31 December
2018 comprise the Company and its subsidiaries (together referred
to as the Group).
1. Accounting policies
Basis of preparation
The consolidated financial statements of Rotork plc have been
prepared and approved by the directors in accordance with
International Financial Reporting Standards as adopted by the
European Union (IFRSs as adopted by the EU), IFRIC Interpretations
and the Companies Act 2006 applicable to companies reporting under
IFRS.
New accounting standards and interpretations
i. IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers
IFRS 15 was issued in May 2014 and amended in April 2016, and
establishes a five-step model to account for revenue arising from
contracts with customers. Under IFRS 15, revenue is recognised at
an amount that reflects the consideration to which an entity
expects to be entitled in exchange for transferring goods or
services to a customer. The Group has adopted IFRS 15 from 1
January 2018, using the modified retrospective method
(retrospectively with the cumulative effect at the date of initial
application).
During 2017, the Group performed a detailed analysis of
significant revenue streams, communicated to key stakeholders
within the business the key aspects of the accounting change and
had specific targeted training for key finance employees. In early
2018, further work targeted service revenue to assess the impact of
the change over the transition date. The adoption of IFRS 15 had no
material impact on the recognition and measurement of the Group's
revenue and no adjustments to equity have been made.
ii. IFRS 9 Financial Instruments
In July 2014, the IASB issued the final version of IFRS 9
Financial Instruments that replaces IAS 39 Financial Instruments:
Recognition and Measurement and all previous versions of IFRS 9.
IFRS 9 brings together all three aspects of the accounting for
financial instruments project: classification and measurement,
impairment and hedge accounting. IFRS 9 introduced a new model for
classification and measurement of financial assets and financial
liabilities, a single, forward-looking "expected loss" model for
measuring impairment of financial assets (including trade
receivables) and a new approach to hedge accounting that is more
closely aligned with an entity's risk management activities.
The Group has adopted IFRS 9 from 1 January 2018 and there has
been no material impact on the Group's results or financial
position.
iii. Other amendments
A number of amended standards became applicable for the current
reporting period. The application of these amendments has not had
any material impact on the disclosures, net assets or results of
the Group.
New standards and interpretations not yet adopted
Certain new accounting standards and interpretations have been
published that are not mandatory for 31 December 2018 reporting
periods and have not been early adopted by the Group. An assessment
of the impact of these new standards and interpretations is set out
below.
i. IFRS 16 Leases
IFRS 16 was issued in January 2016 and introduces a
comprehensive model for the identification of lease arrangements
and accounting treatments for both lessors and lessees. IFRS 16
will supersede the current lease guidance including IAS 17 Leases
and the related interpretations when it becomes effective for
annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2019.
IFRS 16 distinguishes leases and service contracts on the basis
of whether an identified asset is controlled by a customer.
Distinctions of operating leases (off balance sheet) and finance
leases (on balance sheet) are removed for lessee accounting, and
are replaced by a model where a right-of-use asset and a
corresponding liability have to be recognised for all leases by
lessees (i.e. all on balance sheet) except for short-term leases
and leases of low value assets.
The right-of-use asset is initially measured at cost and
subsequently measured at cost (subject to certain exceptions) less
accumulated depreciation and impairment losses, adjusted for any
remeasurement of the lease liability. The lease liability is
initially measured at the present value of the lease payments that
are not paid at that date. Subsequently, the lease liability is
adjusted for interest and lease payments, as well as the impact of
lease modifications, amongst others. Furthermore, the
classification of cash flows will also be affected as operating
lease payments under IAS 17 are presented as operating cash flows;
whereas under the IFRS 16 model, the lease payments will be split
into a principal and an interest portion which will be presented as
financing and operating cash flows respectively. Extensive
disclosures are required by IFRS 16.
As at 31 December 2018, the Group has non-cancellable operating
lease commitments of GBP17,789,000. Of these commitments,
approximately GBP4,800,000 relate to short-term leases and low
value leases which will both be recognised on a straight-line basis
as an expense in the income statement, consistent with current
accounting. For the remaining lease commitments the Group expects
to recognise right-of-use assets of approximately GBP12,100,000 and
lease liabilities of approximately GBP12,100,000 on 1 January
2019.
The Group expects that the impact on profit after tax will not
be material as a result of adopting the new rules.
Operating cash flows will increase and financing cash flows
decrease by approximately GBP4,000,000 as repayment of the
principal portion of the lease liabilities will be classified as
cash flows from financing activities.
The Board has decided to apply the modified retrospective method
when the standard is first adopted in its financial statements for
the year ended 31 December 2019. Therefore, there will be no impact
on any comparative accounting period, with any leases recognised on
balance sheet on the adoption date of 1 January 2019.
ii. Other
There are no other standards that are not yet effective and that
would be expected to have a material impact on the entity in the
current or future reporting periods and on foreseeable future
transactions.
Adjustments to profit
Adjustments to profit are items of income and expense which,
because of the nature, size and/or infrequency of the events giving
rise to them, merit separate presentation. These specific items are
presented on the face of the income statement to provide greater
clarity and a better understanding of the impact of these items on
the Group's financial performance. In doing so, it also facilitates
greater comparison of the Group's underlying results with prior
periods and assessment of trends in financial performance. This
split is consistent with how underlying business performance is
measured internally.
Adjustments to profit items may include but are not restricted
to: costs of significant business restructuring, significant
impairments of intangible or tangible assets, adjustments to the
fair value of acquisition related items such as contingent
consideration, acquired intangible asset amortisation and other
items due to their significance, size or nature, and the related
taxation.
Going concern
After carrying out a detailed review of the viability of the
business, the directors have a reasonable expectation that the
Group has adequate resources to continue in operational existence
for the foreseeable future. For this reason, they continue to adopt
the going concern basis in preparing the financial statements. In
forming this view, the directors have considered trading and cash
flow forecasts, financial commitments, the significant order book
with customers spread across different geographic areas and
industries and the net cash position.
Consolidation
The consolidated financial statements incorporate the financial
statements of the Company and its subsidiaries for the year to 31
December 2018. The financial statements of subsidiaries are
included in the consolidated financial statements from the date
that control commences until the date control ceases. Intra-group
balances and any unrealised gains or losses or income and expenses
arising from intra-group transactions are eliminated in preparing
the consolidated financial statements.
Status of this preliminary announcement
The financial information contained in this preliminary
announcement does not constitute the Company's statutory accounts
for the years ended 31 December 2018 or 2017. Statutory accounts
for 2017, which were prepared under International Financial
Reporting Standards as adopted by the EU, have been delivered to
the registrar of companies, and those for 2018 will be delivered in
due course. The auditors have reported on those accounts; their
reports were (i) unqualified, (ii) did not include a reference to
any matters to which the auditors drew attention by way of emphasis
without qualifying their report and (iii) did not contain a
statement under section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.
Full financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2018 will
shortly be posted to shareholders, and after adoption at the Annual
General Meeting on 26 April 2019 will be delivered to the
registrar.
2. Alternative performance measures
The Group uses adjusted figures as key performance measures in
addition to those reported under adopted IFRS, as management
believe these measures facilitate greater comparison of the Group's
underlying results with prior periods and assessment of trends in
financial performance.
The key alternative performance measures that the Group use
include adjusted profit measures and organic constant currency
(OCC). Explanations of how they are calculated and how they are
reconciled to IFRS statutory results are set out below.
a. Adjusted operating profit
Adjusted operating profit is the Group's operating profit
excluding the amortisation of acquired intangible assets and other
adjustments that are considered to be significant and where
treatment as an adjusted item provides stakeholders with additional
useful information to assess the trading performance of the Group
on a consistent basis. Further details on the other adjustments are
given in note 4.
b. Adjusted profit before tax
The adjustments in calculating adjusted profit before tax are
consistent with those in calculating adjusted operating profit
above.
2018 2017
------------------------------------------------------------- ------- --------
Profit before tax 120,748 80,586
Adjustments:
Amortisation of acquired intangible assets 20,284 27,183
Curtailment gain from the closure of defined benefit pension
schemes to future accrual (8,575) -
Guaranteed Minimum Pension equalisation expense 920 -
Release of contingent consideration - (10,000)
Impairment of goodwill - 21,594
Consultancy costs associated with the Growth Acceleration
Programme 4,052 1,630
Loss on disposal of businesses 658 -
Redundancy and executive change costs 2,896 1,980
Other restructuring costs 2,862 1,803
Adjusted profit before tax 143,845 124,776
------------------------------------------------------------- ------- --------
c. Adjusted basic and diluted earnings per share
Adjusted basic earnings per share is calculated using the
adjusted net profit attributable to the ordinary shareholders and
dividing it by the weighted average ordinary shares in issue (see
note 8). Adjusted net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
is calculated as follows:
2018 2017
------------------------------------------------------------- ------- --------
Net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders 91,744 55,613
Adjustments:
Amortisation of acquired intangible assets 20,284 27,183
Curtailment gain from the closure of defined benefit pension
schemes to future accrual (8,575) -
Guaranteed Minimum Pension equalisation expense 920 -
Release of contingent consideration - (10,000)
Impairment of goodwill - 21,594
Consultancy costs associated with the Growth Acceleration
Programme 4,052 1,630
Loss on disposal of businesses 658 -
Redundancy and executive change costs 2,896 1,980
Other restructuring costs 2,862 1,803
Tax effect on adjusted items (5,025) (7,879)
Adjusted net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders 109,816 91,924
------------------------------------------------------------- ------- --------
Diluted earnings per share is calculated by using the adjusted
net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders and dividing it by
the weighted average ordinary shares in issue adjusted to assume
conversion of all potentially dilutive ordinary shares (see note
8).
d. Adjusted dividend cover
Dividend cover is calculated as earnings per share divided by
dividends per share. Adjusted dividend cover is calculated as
adjusted earnings per share as defined in note 2c above divided by
dividends per share.
e. Return on capital employed
The return on capital employed ratio is used by management to
help ensure that capital is used efficiently.
2018 2017
-------------------------------------- --------- --------
Adjusted operating profit
As reported 146,015 130,162
Capital employed 513,628 457,200
Cash and cash equivalents (104,489) (63,192)
Interest bearing loans and borrowings 60,881 75,807
Pension deficit net of deferred tax 22,001 38,924
-------------------------------------- --------- --------
Average capital employed 492,021 508,739
-------------------------------------- --------- --------
Return on capital employed 29.2% 24.9%
-------------------------------------- --------- --------
Average capital employed is defined as the average of the
capital employed at the start and end of the relevant year.
f. Working capital as a percentage of revenue
Working capital as a percentage of revenue is monitored as
control of working capital is key to achieving our cash generation
targets. It is calculated as inventory plus trade receivables, less
trade payables, divided by revenue.
g. Organic constant currency (OCC)
OCC results remove the results of businesses acquired or
disposed of during the period that are not consistently presented
in both periods' results. The 2018 results are restated at 2017
exchange rates.
For businesses acquired, the full results are removed from the
year of acquisition. In the following year, the results for the
number of months equivalent to the pre-acquisition period In the
prior year are removed. For disposals and closure of businesses,
the results are removed from the current and prior periods.
Key headings in the income statement are reconciled to OCC as
follows:
OCC
31 December Currency Impact of 31 December
2018 adjustment disposals 2018
--------------------------- ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Revenue 695,713 16,436 (3,145) 709,004
Cost of sales (384,203) (10,361) 1,943 (392,621)
--------------------------- ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Gross margin 311,510 6,075 (1,202) 316,383
Overheads (165,495) (2,404) 1,141 (166,758)
----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Adjusted operating profit 146,015 3,671 (61) 149,625
Interest (2,170) (136) (4) (2,310)
--------------------------- ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Adjusted profit before tax 143,845 3,535 (65) 147,315
--------------------------- ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Adjusted taxation (34,029) (838) 40 (34,827)
--------------------------- ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Adjusted profit after tax 109,816 2,697 (25) 112,488
--------------------------- ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
31 December Currency Impact of 31 December
2017 adjustment disposals 2017
--------------------------- ----------- ----------- ---------- -----------
Revenue 642,229 - (5,319) 636,910
Cost of sales (358,090) - 3,290 (354,800)
--------------------------- ----------- ----------- ---------- -----------
Gross margin 284,139 - (2,029) 282,110
Overheads (153,977) - 2,213 (151,764)
----------- ----------- ---------- -----------
Adjusted operating profit 130,162 - 184 130,346
Interest (5,386) - (8) (5,394)
--------------------------- ----------- ----------- ---------- -----------
Adjusted profit before tax 124,776 - 176 124,952
--------------------------- ----------- ----------- ---------- -----------
Taxation (32,852) - 11 (32,841)
--------------------------- ----------- ----------- ---------- -----------
Adjusted profit after tax 91,924 - 187 92,111
--------------------------- ----------- ----------- ---------- -----------
3. Operating segments
The Group has chosen to organise the management and financial
structure by the grouping of related products. The four
identifiable operating segments for which the financial and
operating performance is reviewed monthly by the chief operating
decision maker are as follows:
Controls - the design, manufacture and sale of electric
actuators
Fluid Systems - the design, manufacture and sale of pneumatic
and hydraulic actuators
Gears - the design, manufacture and sale of gearboxes, adaption
and ancillaries for the valve industry
Instruments - the manufacture of high precision pneumatic
controls and power transmission products for a wide range of
industries
Unallocated expenses comprise corporate expenses.
Transfer prices between business segments are set on an arm's
length basis in a manner similar to transactions with third
parties.
Geographic analysis
Rotork has a worldwide presence in all four operating segments
through its subsidiary selling offices and through an agency
network. A full list of locations can be found at
www.rotork.com.
Analysis by operating segment:
Fluid
Controls Systems Gears Instruments Elimination Unallocated Group
2018 2018 2018 2018 2018 2018 2018
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Revenue from external customers 351,858 166,328 76,260 101,267 - - 695,713
Inter segment revenue - - 9,352 5,887 (15,239) - -
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Total revenue 351,858 166,328 85,612 107,154 (15,239) - 695,713
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Adjusted operating profit* 101,344 16,135 15,307 24,085 - (10,856) 146,015
Amortisation of acquired intangible
assets (2,851) (779) (2,082) (14,572) - - (20,284)
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Segment result before adjustments 98,493 15,356 13,225 9,513 - (10,856) 125,731
Other adjustments (2,813)
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Operating profit 122,918
Net finance expense (2,170)
Income tax expense (29,004)
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Profit for the year 91,744
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Fluid
Controls Systems Gears Instruments Elimination Unallocated Group
2017 2017 2017 2017 2017 2017 2017
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Revenue from external customers 325,174 150,117 72,814 94,124 - - 642,229
Inter segment revenue - - 11,086 6,498 (17,584) - -
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Total revenue 325,174 150,117 83,900 100,622 (17,584) - 642,229
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Adjusted operating profit* 92,903 9,019 15,724 20,457 - (7,941) 130,162
Amortisation of acquired intangible
assets (2,888) (1,409) (2,021) (20,865) - - (27,183)
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Segment result before adjustments 90,015 7,610 13,703 (408) - (7,941) 102,979
Other adjustments (17,007)
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Operating profit 85,972
Net finance expense (5,386)
Income tax expense (24,973)
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
Profit for the year 55,613
------------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------
*Adjusted operating profit is operating profit before the
amortisation of acquired intangible assets and other adjustments
(see note 4)
Fluid
Controls Systems Gears Instruments Unallocated Group
2018 2018 2018 2018 2018 2018
------------------------------------------- -------- -------- ----- ----------- ----------- -------
Depreciation 5,113 2,507 2,374 1,616 32 11,642
Amortisation:
* Acquired intangible assets 2,851 779 2,082 14,572 - 20,284
* Development costs 1,463 216 242 654 - 2,575
Impairment of goodwill - - - - - -
Release of contingent consideration - - - - - -
Impairment of development cost assets 143 162 216 178 - 699
Impairment of property, plant and
equipment 1,350 - - - - 1,350
Non-cash items: equity settled share-based
payments 2,107 925 532 522 588 4,674
Net financing expense - - - - (2,170) (2,170)
Capital expenditure 5,201 1,598 2,023 1,606 - 10,428
------------------------------------------- -------- -------- ----- ----------- ----------- -------
Fluid
Controls Systems Gears Instruments Unallocated Group
2017 2017 2017 2017 2017 2017
------------------------------------------- -------- -------- ----- ----------- ----------- --------
Depreciation 5,622 2,801 1,813 1,951 45 12,232
Amortisation:
* Acquired intangible assets 2,888 1,409 2,021 20,865 - 27,183
* Development costs 1,670 469 259 301 - 2,699
Impairment of goodwill - - 1,840 19,754 - 21,594
Release of contingent consideration - - - (10,000) - (10,000)
Non-cash items: equity settled share-based
payments 1,515 652 418 545 260 3,390
Net financing expense - - - - (5,386) (5,386)
Capital expenditure 7,355 1,495 1,622 1,933 - 12,405
------------------------------------------- -------- -------- ----- ----------- ----------- --------
Balance sheets are reviewed by subsidiary and operating segment
balance sheets are not prepared, therefore no further analysis of
operating segments assets and liabilities is presented.
Geographical analysis:
Revenue by location of subsidiary 2018 2017
---------------------------------- ------- -------
UK 71,458 76,281
Italy 80,772 82,165
Rest of Europe 127,960 113,822
USA 149,180 149,526
Other Americas 42,235 31,549
Rest of World 224,108 188,886
---------------------------------- ------- -------
695,713 642,229
---------------------------------- ------- -------
4. OTHER ADJUSTMENTS
The other adjustments are adjustments that management consider
to be significant and where separate disclosure enables
stakeholders to assess the underlying trading performance of the
Group on a consistent basis.
The other adjustments to profit included in statutory profit are
as follows:
2018 2017
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Curtailment gain from the closure of defined benefit pension
schemes to future accrual 8,575 -
Guaranteed Minimum Pension (GMP) equalisation expense (920) -
Release of contingent consideration - 10,000
Goodwill impairment - (21,594)
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
7,655 (11,594)
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Consultancy costs associated with the Growth Acceleration
Programme (4,052) (1,630)
Loss on disposal of businesses (658) -
Redundancy and executive change costs (2,896) (1,980)
Other restructuring costs (2,862) (1,803)
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
(10,468) (5,413)
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
(2,813) (17,007)
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
After the completion of consultation processes with members of
the UK and US defined benefit pension schemes both schemes were
closed to future accrual on 31 March 2018 and 31 December 2018,
respectively. The closure to future accrual of the two schemes
resulted in a one off, non-cash curtailment gain which reduced the
defined benefit obligation by GBP8,575,000 (2017: GBPnil).
In October 2018 the High Court judgement in the case of Lloyds
Banking Group clarified that pension benefits under the UK scheme
need to be equalised for the effects of unequal GMPs. An allowance
of GBP920,000 (2017: GBPnil) has been included as a past service
cost within the UK scheme's 2018 defined benefit pension expense
for all such arrears.
Consultancy costs of GBP4,052,000 (2017: GBP1,630,000) were
incurred on developing the growth acceleration programme. The
consultancy costs in the second half of the year reduced to
GBP752,000.
The loss on disposal of GBP658,000 (2017: GBPnil) relates to the
sale of the Hiller business, closure of an engineering office and
the closure of the Valvekits business. The assets of GBP3,831,000
disposed of included goodwill (GBP2,239,000), inventory
(GBP1,541,000) and a building (GBP474,000). Redundancy costs
(GBP704,000) and asset write-downs specific to the disposals
(GBP464,000) contributed to the other costs of exiting the
businesses. Proceeds of GBP3,010,000 were received in respect of
the Hiller business and GBP1,330,000 in respect of the assets of
the Valvekits business. The impact of these disposals on revenue
and profit in 2018 and the prior year is shown in note 2.
The GBP2,896,000 (2017: GBP1,980,000) redundancy and executive
change costs have been incurred as a result of the progress made
with the Growth Acceleration Programme.
Other restructuring costs include GBP700,000 (2017: GBPnil)
related to ending development and sales of products for the
containment area of nuclear power plants and a GBP1,350,000 (2017:
GBPnil) impairment charge resulting from the ongoing review of the
global footprint.
The GBP8,575,000 credit relating to the closure of the UK and US
defined benefit pension schemes is included in other income. All
other adjustments are included in administrative expenses, with the
exception of the loss on the disposal of businesses which is
included in other expenses. The asset write-downs relating to
property, and certain of the costs relating to the closure and
disposal of businesses are not tax-deductible. The remaining
adjustments are taxable or tax-deductible in the country in which
the expense is incurred.
5. finance Income and EXPENSE
Recognised in the income statement
2018 2017
----------------------------------- ----- -----
Interest income 1,618 1,206
Foreign exchange gains 660 175
----------------------------------- ----- -----
Finance income 2,278 1,381
----------------------------------- ----- -----
2018 2017
---------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Interest expense (3,072) (3,184)
Interest charge on pension scheme liabilities (1,055) (1,607)
Foreign exchange losses (321) (1,976)
---------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Finance expense (4,448) (6,767)
---------------------------------------------- ------- -------
6. Income tax expense
2018 2018 2017 2017
-------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Current tax:
UK corporation tax on profits for the year 3,476 3,407
Adjustment in respect of prior years (851) (974)
-------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
2,625 2,433
Overseas tax on profits for the year 27,646 27,386
Adjustment in respect of prior years (223) 343
-------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
27,423 27,729
-------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Total current tax 30,048 30,162
-------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Deferred tax:
Origination and reversal of other temporary differences (1,307) (6,711)
Impact of rate change 30 1,162
Adjustment in respect of prior years 233 360
-------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Total deferred tax (1,044) (5,189)
-------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Total tax charge for year 29,004 24,973
-------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Profit before tax 120,748 80,586
Profit before tax multiplied by the blended standard
rate of corporation tax in
the UK of 19.0% (2017: 19.25%) 22,942 15,513
Effects of:
Different tax rates on overseas earnings 7,107 6,571
Permanent differences 1,015 138
Losses not recognised (90) 768
Tax incentives (1,159) (1,140)
Impact of rate change 30 1,162
Non-taxable contingent consideration - (1,925)
Non-deductible goodwill written off - 4,157
Adjustments to tax charge in respect of prior
years (841) (271)
-------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Total tax charge for year 29,004 24,973
-------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Effective tax rate 24.0% 31.0%
-------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Adjusted profit before tax (note 2b) 143,845 124,776
Total tax charge for the year 29,004 24,973
Amortisation of acquired intangible assets 4,499 6,664
Defined benefit pension schemes (note 4) (1,301) -
Restructuring costs (note 4) 1,827 1,215
-------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Adjusted total tax charge for the year 34,029 32,852
-------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Adjusted effective tax rate 23.7% 26.3%
-------------------------------------------- -------- --------
A tax credit of GBP98,000 (2017: GBP252,000) in respect of
share-based payments has been recognised directly in equity in the
year.
The effective tax rate for the year is 24.0% (2017: 31.0%). The
adjusted effective tax rate is 23.7% (2017: 26.3%) and is lower
than the effective tax rate for the year principally because of the
geographic mix of those countries where certain of the adjusting
items were incurred.
The adjusted effective tax rate has fallen from 26.3% in 2017 to
23.7% in 2018, principally because of the reduction in the US
corporate tax rate from 35% to 21%, which came into effect on 1
January 2018. In 2017 this resulted in a one-off charge to tax of
GBP1,162,000 on the revaluation of the US net deferred tax asset,
and in 2018 this has resulted in a reduction in the US tax charge
because of the lower rate of tax. The Group expects its adjusted
effective tax rate to continue to fall in line with the current
trend in corporate tax rates where Rotork operates. However the
adjusted effective tax rate will still be higher than the standard
UK rate due to higher rates of tax in China, the US, Canada,
France, Germany, Italy, Japan and India.
There is an unrecognised deferred tax liability for temporary
differences associated with investments in subsidiaries. Rotork plc
controls the dividend policies of its subsidiaries and the timing
of the reversal of the temporary differences. The value of
temporary differences associated with unremitted earnings of
subsidiaries for which deferred tax has not been recognised is
GBP321,281,000 (2017: GBP305,277,000).
7. Capital and reserves
0.5p 0.5p
Ordinary Ordinary
shares GBP1 shares GBP1
issued Non- issued Non-
and fully redeemable and fully redeemable
paid preference paid preference
up shares up shares
2018 2018 2017 2017
------------------------------------ ---------- ----------- ---------- -----------
At 1 January 4,352 40 4,350 40
Issued under employee share schemes 6 - 2 -
------------------------------------ ---------- ----------- ---------- -----------
At 31 December 4,358 40 4,352 40
------------------------------------ ---------- ----------- ---------- -----------
Number of shares (000) 871,625 870,429
------------------------------------ ---------- ----------- ---------- -----------
The ordinary shareholders are entitled to receive dividends as
declared and are entitled to vote at meetings of the Company.
The Group received proceeds of GBP1,837,000 (2017: GBP713,000)
in respect of the 1,197,838 (2017: 378,540) ordinary shares issued
during the year: GBP6,000 (2017: GBP2,000) was credited to share
capital and GBP1,831,000 (2017: GBP711,000) to share premium.
The preference shareholders take priority over the ordinary
shareholders when there is a distribution upon winding up the
Company or on a reduction of equity involving a return of capital.
The holders of preference shares are entitled to vote at a general
meeting of the Company if a preference dividend is in arrears for
six months or the business of the meeting includes the
consideration of a resolution for winding up the Company or the
alteration of the preference shareholders' rights.
Within the retained earnings reserve are own shares held. The
investment in own shares held is GBP4,227,000 (2017: GBP1,594,000)
and represents 1,387,000 (2017: 566,000) ordinary shares of the
Company held in trust for the benefit of directors and employees
for future payments under the Share Incentive Plan and Long Term
Incentive Plan. The dividends on these shares have been waived.
Translation reserve
The translation reserve comprises all foreign exchange
differences arising from the translation of the financial
statements of foreign operations.
Capital redemption reserve
The capital redemption reserve arises when the Company redeems
shares wholly out of distributable profits.
Hedging reserve
The hedging reserve comprises the effective portion of the
cumulative net change in the fair value of cash flow hedging
instruments that are determined to be an effective hedge.
Dividends
The following dividends were paid in the year per qualifying
ordinary share:
2018
Payment date 2018 2017
------------------------------------- -------------- ------ ------
3.35p final dividend (2017: 3.15p) 23 May 29,154 27,391
2.20p interim dividend (2017: 2.05p) 21 September 19,134 17,827
48,288 45,218
---------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
After the balance sheet date the following dividends per
qualifying ordinary share were proposed by the directors. The
dividends have not been provided for and there are no corporation
tax consequences.
2018 2017
----------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
Final proposed dividend per qualifying ordinary share
3.70p 32,250
----------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
3.35p 29,159
----------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
8. Earnings per share
Basic earnings per share
Earnings per share is calculated for both the current and
previous years using the profit attributable to the ordinary
shareholders for the year. The earnings per share calculation is
based on 869.9m shares (2017: 869.4m shares) being the weighted
average number of ordinary shares in issue (net of own ordinary
shares held) for the year.
2018 2017
----------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders 91,744 55,613
----------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Weighted average number of ordinary shares
Issued ordinary shares at 1 January 869,863 869,087
Effect of own shares held (115) 252
Effect of shares issued under Sharesave plans 123 95
----------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Weighted average number of ordinary shares during the year 869,871 869,434
----------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Basic earnings per share 10.5p 6.4p
----------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Adjusted basic earnings per share
Adjusted basic earnings per share is calculated for both the
current and previous years using the profit attributable to the
ordinary shareholders for the year after adding back the after tax
impact of the adjustments. The reconciliation showing how adjusted
net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders is derived is
shown in note 2.
2018 2017
----------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Adjusted net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders 109,816 91,924
----------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Weighted average number of ordinary shares during the year 869,871 869,434
----------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Adjusted basic earnings per share 12.6p 10.6p
----------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Diluted earnings per share
Diluted earnings per share is based on the profit for the year
attributable to the ordinary shareholders and 874.0m shares (2017:
872.0m shares). The number of shares is equal to the weighted
average number of ordinary shares in issue (net of own ordinary
shares held) adjusted to assume conversion of all potentially
dilutive ordinary shares. The Company has two categories of
potentially dilutive ordinary shares: those share options granted
to employees under the Sharesave plan where the exercise price is
less than the average market price of the Company's ordinary shares
during the year and contingently issuable shares awarded under the
Long Term Incentive Plan (LTIP).
2018 2017
------------------------------------------------------------ ------- -------
Net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders 91,744 55,613
------------------------------------------------------------ ------- -------
Weighted average number of ordinary shares (diluted)
Weighted average number of ordinary shares for the year 869,871 869,434
Effect of Sharesave options 1,583 1,583
Effect of LTIP share awards 2,514 993
------------------------------------------------------------ ------- -------
Weighted average number of ordinary shares (diluted) during
the year 873,968 872,010
------------------------------------------------------------ ------- -------
Diluted earnings per share 10.5p 6.4p
------------------------------------------------------------ ------- -------
Adjusted diluted earnings per share
2018 2017
------------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Adjusted net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders 109,816 91,924
------------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Weighted average number of ordinary shares (diluted) during
the year 873,969 872,010
------------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
Adjusted diluted earnings per share 12.6p 10.5p
------------------------------------------------------------- ------- -------
9. Employee benefits
2018 2017
------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
Recognised liability for defined benefit obligations:
* Present value of funded obligations 207,021 237,054
* Fair value of plan assets (179,728) (188,844)
------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
27,293 48,210
Other pension scheme liabilities 409 344
Employee bonuses 21,703 17,512
Long term incentive plan 641 331
Employee indemnity provision 2,677 2,823
Other employee benefits 5,040 4,537
57,763 73,757
------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
Non-current 31,274 52,293
Current 26,489 21,464
------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
57,763 73,757
------------------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
10. Provisions
Contingent Warranty Restructuring
consideration provision provision Total
------------------------------------------ -------------- ---------- ------------- -------
Balance at 1 January 2018 397 5,847 - 6,244
Exchange differences 3 148 27 178
(Credit) / charge to the income statement (91) 3,641 2,674 6,224
Provisions utilised during the year (10) (2,766) (1,125) (3,901)
Disposal of business - (359) - (359)
------------------------------------------ -------------- ---------- ------------- -------
Balance at 31 December 2018 299 6,511 1,576 8,386
------------------------------------------ -------------- ---------- ------------- -------
Maturity at 31 December 2018
Non-current - 2,149 - 2,149
Current 299 4,362 1,576 6,237
------------------------------------------ -------------- ---------- ------------- -------
299 6,511 1,576 8,386
------------------------------------------ -------------- ---------- ------------- -------
Maturity at 31 December 2017
Non-current - 1,929 - 1,929
Current 397 3,918 - 4,315
------------------------------------------ -------------- ---------- ------------- -------
397 5,847 - 6,244
------------------------------------------ -------------- ---------- ------------- -------
The warranty provision is based on estimates made from
historical warranty data associated with similar products and
services. The provision relates mainly to products sold during the
last 12 months and the typical warranty period is 18 months.
The restructuring provision relates to amounts outstanding in
respect of redundancy and other restructuring costs associated with
the Growth Acceleration Programme.
11. Related parties
The Group has a related party relationship with its subsidiaries
and with its directors and key management. Transactions between two
subsidiaries for the sale and purchase of products or the
subsidiary and parent Company for management charges are priced on
an arm's length basis.
Evoqua Water Technologies LLC is a related party of Rotork plc
by virtue of M Lamb's non-executive chairmanship. Sales to
subsidiaries and associates of Evoqua Water Technologies LLC
totalled GBP80,000 during the year and GBP18,000 was outstanding at
31 December 2018.
Drax Group plc is a related party of Rotork plc by virtue of T
Cobbold's non-executive directorship. Sales to subsidiaries and
associates of Drax Group plc totalled GBP475,000 during the year
and GBP143,000 was outstanding at 31 December 2018.
TechnipFMC plc is a related party of Rotork plc by virtue of A
Andersen's employment with the company. Sales to subsidiaries and
associates of TechnipFMC plc totalled GBP690,000 during the year
and GBP289,000 was outstanding at 31 December 2018.
All the transactions above are on an arm's length basis and on
standard business terms.
Financial calendar
4 March 2019 Preliminary announcement of annual results for 2018
11 April 2019 Ex-dividend date for final proposed 2018 dividend
12 April 2019 Record date for final proposed 2018 dividend
26 April 2019 Announcement of trading update
26 April 2019 Annual General Meeting held at Bailbrook House
Hotel, Eveleigh Avenue, London Road, Bath, BA1 7JD
6 August 2019 Announcement of interim financial results for 2019
This information is provided by RNS, the news service of the
London Stock Exchange. RNS is approved by the Financial Conduct
Authority to act as a Primary Information Provider in the United
Kingdom. Terms and conditions relating to the use and distribution
of this information may apply. For further information, please
contact rns@lseg.com or visit www.rns.com.
END
FR CKDDDOBKDBNK
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March 04, 2019 02:00 ET (07:00 GMT)
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