Oceana Group Limited (OCE) Earnings Call Transcript & Summary

June 9, 2025

Johannesburg Stock Exchange ZA Consumer Staples Food Products earnings 59 min

Earnings Call Speaker Segments

Neville Brink

executive
#1

Good morning, everybody. Welcome to the Oceana Interim Results Presentation. My name is Neville Brink, and I'm joined by Zaf Mahomed, and we'll present our results over the next hour, and then we'll have half an hour for questions. Just to start off, and I thought about this when I was putting my presentation together, what was the message or the messages that I wanted to convey to both the market and the broader audience. And there's 2 things that I wanted to focus on. And one was the strategy that we developed over the last 3 years still is very much in place. The 3-pillar strategy. Each of our divisions has a very clear-cut strategy, and that hasn't changed. And obviously, it's disappointing to see results drop in a year. But I've said to both my management team and to you in the market that we're quite clear in our strategy going forward. And the second message, and I'll get to the strategy now. And the second message I wanted to deliver was, in particular to the management team is we've got to focus on the controllables. The very nature of the fishing industry is the volatility of it. And there are many uncontrollables that we have difficulty managing, things like climate change, weather, catch, exchange rate. And the key for us is to focus on those areas that we can control and focus on driving efficiencies through those areas. So just to give you a snapshot of the strategy that we've developed over the last 3 years, first of all, the Lucky Star Foods, and that remains to grow consumption through availability, unlimited availability. I'll talk a bit about that later. Affordability is key, especially in the world we live in at the moment and our consumers are out there that are really are struggling. And then to take that iconic Lucky Star brand and deliver outside of pure canned pilchards and grow that food category. And that certainly has delivered this year. On our Wild caught side, and remember, we are -- this is seafood for human consumption. We've given quotas both in Namibia and South Africa, and that quota is finite. So the key for us is to deliver as much value out of those quotas in an annual period, maximize cash, maximize the assets that we operate in these fisheries, and we spent sizable CapEx over the last 2 years on these vessels. And the vessel alongside is not earning money. A vessel at sea is when we see value being transformed. And then on the fishmeal and oil side, and this is a volume-based business. Both in the U.S. and in SA, we have the ability to catch more quota than is out there. And we've -- at this point over the last couple of years, haven't maximized quota. So we've got those vessels and factories, and we've invested in them, and it's how to maximize output to those businesses. We can't control the fish oil and the fishmeal price. That's a commodity, world commodity market. Pricing is what the pricing is. What we can do is maximize volume and maximize value. So those strategies remain in place and will continue, and we are driving those strategies. Some of the key highlights for this year's performance. Obviously, I spoke about Lucky Star and had a very, very good performance, and we'll go through the details now, strong demand for our product. We've had operational efficiencies coming through the factories. We've invested in those factories over the last 2 years, and certainly, that has come through. And then we've got healthy inventory levels, and there was a strategic decision that we made this year to buy additional product, and I'll talk a bit about that later, and that certainly has paid dividends and will pay dividends in the second half. We're in a very fortunate position to have very good stock holding unlike some of our competitors, which has been -- which will stand in good stead over the next couple of months. On the Wild caught side, catch rates generally have started to improve, and it's pleasing to see. I would have hoped they would have improved more than anticipated. But generally, across all of the species in South Africa and Namibia, we've seen an improvement in the biomass and the catchability of those species. We've come from an El Niño phase. We're going into a more neutral phase, and we've seen that translate into better catch rates, a little bit disappointing about horse mackerel, and I think that hopefully will start getting better over the next couple of years. But generally, across all species, we've seen an improvement. On the fishmeal side in Africa, very good landings of red eye, which is a catch limit, upper catch limit that the industry gets, and we've had record landings of red eye and very high oil recovery. So a good performance of -- and remember, in fishmeal in Africa, the real performance comes in the second half. Our first half -- in the first 3 months, our factories are closed for maintenance, and we only start fishing in late January, early February. So it's really a second half business, but good performance coming out of that division. U.S., obviously, this is the star performer from last year. Record first half driven by oil price and the shortage of oil in the market, fish oil in the market, which drove prices up. We've seen a more balanced market and more balanced pricing with Peru recovering last year and this year. And in fact, we're probably seeing a slight overcorrection and very difficult to meet the performance of last year. Certainly, the assets and the vessels through our partner are certainly ready for the season, and I'll talk a bit about how the season has started. And then on the debt side, and Zaf will talk a little bit more about debt and our balance sheet. But we've invested quite heavily in working capital in frozen pilchard stock over the period October to December, and I'll talk a little bit about that, and how that will unwind over the next 6 months. So let's go straight into the U.S. Performance relative to a long-term average is reasonable. Obviously, relative to last year, a major drop, 55% in rand terms and 53% in dollar terms. We saw a strengthening of the rand over this period, which obviously doesn't favor this division because it's translated into rand, so a stronger rand doesn't support this division. But still, the business is in a reasonable state. These are the catch graphs over the last 8, 7 years. And you can see last year, we didn't have a great season. A lot of unusual wins. So 527 million fish caught in the year, well below the long-term average of 630,000 tons. What was positive, we had good oil yields, 12.5%, 12.1%. And then the start of this season and the graph shows you up to week 6 -- in fact, last week was week 7, and I got the numbers this morning. But if you see the red line, that was last year. And we started off well, but then the market tapered off and hence, and it continued to taper for the rest of the 28-week cycle, ending quite a low year in 527 million fish. This year, we started reasonably slow, but there's been a steady increase. And last week, we landed 32 million fish. I got the numbers this morning. So that puts us well above last year and very close to the 5-year average. The other positive thing coming out of this fishery is our oil yield has been also steadily improving, averaging just short of 10% as of week 7, which is certainly a good sign for us going forward into the market. The key for this business is how do we drive volume. And we're working very closely with our partners in Westbank to drive fishing. And for the first time, since we've taken other business, we've now commenced with weekend fishing. He has -- our partners managed to convince and get these vessels to see over weekends that traditionally didn't happen. And we've had 2 weekends of fishing, which is enhanced fishing. And if we can continue to do this, is a 28-week period of weekends that will add value to -- and volume to the fishing effort. From a stock point of view, and I've spoken about this extensively about the need to keep our long-standing customers stocked in the period that we don't fish. Remember, we only fish from April to October, and then -- but our customers, both the Scandinavian oil salmon farmers and our pet food customers in the U.S. demand 12 months supply. They're not -- we certainly don't sell in the [indiscernible] market. We have 4 or 5 key customers that require monthly and quarterly deliveries, and we've managed to maintain that. So we carried over a reasonable amount of stock, in particular on oil, 13,000 tons of oil into the start of this half and 26,000 tons of fishmeal, which was -- which have essentially been sold. The oil has been sold and is reflected in the first half's results. The meal will be sold over the period right until May and June when we start seeing production coming through into the inventory levels. So good carryover of stock. The right-hand graph is, unfortunately, the tracking the pricing. And then you can see in 2024, pricing jumped up by 72% in oil from about $3,000 to $5,500. As Peru -- and you'll see some graphs just now in Peru. As Peru started having a normalized season, that pricing has rectified and dropped by 45% this year. The other disappointing step there is the drop in fishmeal price. Remember, most of our fishmeal is sold to the pet food market. But with Peru also catching very good quantities, that has also softened. And we've got the demand from China. China still hasn't and Chinese aquaculture industry still hasn't rebounded from the COVID days. We've seen a lot of stimulus being put in by the Chinese government to try and stimulate the economy, not only the aquaculture section, but that is coming through. And we expect that to start improving in 2026. And hopefully, that will drive fishmeal prices on the upward trend. We still believe that the long-term trajectory of this business, the fish meal and oil business is positive. Finite resource, growing demand for raw material and hence, a long-term increase in pricing over the period. Fishmeal and oil in Africa, obviously, same type of business. Again, as I spoke about earlier, this is a business of 2 halves. Generally, our fishing only starts in February. So an improvement in operating profit, but still an operating loss. The second half is when we realize the sales of the catches, but certainly an improvement. And we've invested heavily in this business. As you remember, last year, we spent capital on our 2 fishmeal and oil factories. We closed [indiscernible] for almost 4 months where we upgraded just about all of the machinery, and we certainly are seeing those coming through in our performance from the factory. On a catching point, the top left-hand graph is showing what is referred to as red eye or South Atlantic herring. This is not a quota-based species, but it's called -- it's an Olympic system. The industry gets a quota, and it's first come first serve factory vessels go out and catch the species. We've had record catches of the South Atlantic herring. When the quota was announced or the puckle, as we call it, was announced, it was 130,000 at the beginning of the season. A couple of months ago, they adjusted that to 160,000 and they've just adjusted to 200,000 tons. And the industry has caught almost 80% of that 200,000 so far. Very, very positive start to the season on planning. Conversely, on anchovy, which is a quota-based species where each company gets allocated a TAC, we've seen very little signs of anchovy. Normally, it starts in about April. As of currently, there's -- we've seen very little anchovy landings, and we've been concentrating mainly on the South Atlantic herring. Just a comment on research. The AFRICANA, which is the DAF research vessel goes out annually and does research in all the species. This year, unfortunately, when it does the Pelagic survey, it normally goes around November and does a survey in November, December. Unfortunately, the vessel had maintenance problems and was broken down. So DAFF only managed to get the vessel back to sea in late March, and it went out for a survey. Interesting, the survey has shown quite poor results for anchovy and pilchards, and I'll talk a bit about pilchards, which is very different from what we're seeing at sea. So what we -- our vessels are seeing is strong catches of South Atlantic herring, obviously, no anchovy and strong catches of pilchards. And yet the survey is showing very low recruitment levels. We are obviously talking to DAFF about this because we're not sure if it's a function of the delay in the research strip or it is a function of actual biomass sustainability and health. On the top right-hand graph, I just want to show what we've caught as of the dotted line shows where we were at the end of March, our half year relative to last year, almost 50,000 tons of cut, well ahead of last year, and that trend has continued. So as of today, early June, we caught almost 68,000 tons versus last year, 50,000 tons. And this is South Atlantic herring only. So good landings, which obviously translates into stock, translates into sales into the second half. The other very positive point is the efficiencies that we've derived out of our 2 fishmeal and oil businesses on the West Coast through investment that we've done over the last couple of years has driven both from a quality point of view and a yield point of view. The key component that we've introduced in the [indiscernible] factory is a real-time data ability to track the parameters of the fish meal as it's being produced. And fishmeal has various components. And if you can increase -- you can reduce the moisture and you can increase the protein levels and the quality of the meal, it translates into price. Customers pay for protein levels, and we've been able through the system to actually adjust the cooking parameters to increase the protein and increase the fat levels and reduce the moisture levels, which has translated to a gain of ZAR 24 million in efficiencies and ZAR 41 million in quality parameters. So that ZAR 5 million loss that you saw there in the earlier graph would have been a lot worse if these factories hadn't delivered these efficiencies. So certainly, the investment we put into these businesses has started to pay dividends. And this is not a short-term investment. This is a long-term investment that will pay off over the next couple of years. And again, as I said to you in the early part of the presentation, fishmeal and oil in both U.S. and SA are volume great business. We have the ability. The quota that we get both in anchovy and herring, generally is not caught by the industry. So we have the ability to catch more fish. And in the U.S., it's an effort-based fishery. We have the ability to fish for 7 months of the year and catch as much as possible. And that is the drive for us, drive the volume. I can't control the price, but what I can drive is the quality of production that we produce and the volume that we can try and get our vessels to catch. As you can see on the top left-hand graph there, that is the volume we produced this year, 62,000 tons. We've increased our trimmings, that 22% you see on the top there. That is from the off cuts when we produce can pilchards and we cut the head and cut the tail off. With our increased production from the can pilchards, which you'll see later, that translates into trimmings into the fishmeal plant. So almost 20 -- just over 20% is from trimmings and almost 80% is from raw fish catch, but a healthy increase in production levels and a healthy increase in oil levels, that 5.9% oil that comes traditionally from the trimmings because we bought -- we have bought Pacific pilchards that goes through our canary that is high-end fat, which translates to a higher oil yield out of the fishmeal and oil plant. Bottom left-hand graph shows the pricing, very similar to the trend you saw in the U.S., 49% increase in price from '23 to '24, and a drop of 42% in price and a similar trend in fishmeal price, 18% drop. Very difficult for us to counter that. What we've got to do is try and catch more product to counter the drop in pricing. So this is the -- and it's important that I show this is the Peruvian season, and this is what that drives the fishmeal and fish oil price worldwide. An interesting fact, Peru produces about 35% to 40% of the world's fishmeal and oil requirements. China produces a similar quantity, and there are many countries that produce fishmeal and oil. The one difference between Peru and most other countries that produce is Peru doesn't have its a domestic market for its own oil and meal. It exports 100% of its production, and that determines the price. China conversely produces a similar level, about 35%, but consumes everything in China. So it doesn't determine the price. The top left-hand graph there is the first season, and you see the blue -- the dark blue is the -- and Peru has 2 seasons, an early season and late season. This is showing the first season and what the catch was. And you can see 2023, very low -- just over 1 million tons was allocated as a TAC, but they only caught around 200,000 tons. So very low catch in 2023, which drove the price in 2024 and the early part of '25. In '24, increased up to 2.5 million tons, and they caught 98%, 100% of the allocation was caught. This year, in [ 2025 ], they've allocated a quota of 3 million tons and certainly catching has been going well, and they've caught 54%. Expectations, they will catch very close to 3 million tons, which is driving the price that we're seeing at the moment. At the moment, there isn't a market price for oil at the moment. Both customers and sellers are hesitant to finalize the price. The customers are trying to understand where Peru is going to end up. And so they're reluctant to commit to a price. We obviously just started producing our oil, so we have very limited quantities, and we obviously are testing the market, but we haven't formally committed into any pricing going forward at the moment. On the right-hand side is the oil production just translating from quota to oil. As you can see, only produced 19,000 tons in the '23 year, 170,000 tons last year. And the expectation because they're having a fairly low oil yield this year, positive for us, is they won't -- even with a high catch, won't produce any more oil than they produced last year. So we expect pricing to correct -- there will be some correction in 2026. This was a graph that I was spoking about on the top left is about 5.5 million tons of Peru anchovies caught in Peru. 36% of that comes from Peru -- sorry, 5.5 million tons is produced in total, 36% comes from Peru. As you can see the red graph, that's China, but it's all consumed in China. The other positive aspect is one of the reasons why we've invested in this fishery is the growth in the salmon farming. As you can see over the last 15 years, there's been a constant increase in salmon farming from both sea-based ponds that are in the fields in Scandinavia to land-based raises that are now starting to pop up around the world. In fact, there are some indications that there will be salmon farms being looked at in -- on the West Coast of South Africa and the West Coast of Namibia because certainly, our sea conditions lend itself to salmon farming, but not in our sea conditions are too rough to put it at sea. So there will be land-based operations. So there's a continuous growth in the salmon farming worldwide salmon and that is driving and will continue to drive oil price long-term because there is a finite resource of catch. So I think I've covered all of fishmeal and oil. On the Wild caught seafood side, remember, this is all the species that we catch for human consumption, both in Namibia and South Africa, hake, horse mackerel, squid and lobster and by catch of kingklip and monk. A reasonable performance for this business off a very low base. Certainly, we've seen an improvement, in particular in the hake, squid and lobster, a little disappointing around horse mackerel, and I'll talk a little bit about that later. So on the hake performance. And remember, we've invested in these assets over the last 2 years, in particular, on our vessels. And last year, I spoke about unplanned breakdowns, and that certainly affected our businesses in all of the species. And a vessel alongside doesn't make money. A vessel at sea is operating. And when it's alongside, it's just a cost. And the key for us is to keep those vessels at sea. And when they do come in is to turn them around as quickly as possible. So you can see our catch rates in hake moved from 9.7 tons in 2023 to 11.1 tons in '25, a nice healthy improvement, but still getting better. And we've seen it certainly in the last months, is not in these graphs, but certainly over the last April and May, we've seen a continuous improvement in hake catches across the board. And that -- with increased catches, that drives costs down. I've always spoken about a vessel at sea is a fixed cost, whether it catches 1 kilo or 100 tons, it carries the same cost, daily cost. So the more you can catch the more your costs come down. The other focus for us on -- in particular, on the hake is what we call a volume strategy. When a vessel goes out and is targeting hake and there is limited hake about in that particular day, the focus is to maximize catch. So there are other [indiscernible] catches, which we are -- which have value, snook, horse mackerel and chowi, other species that we will catch is to drive the volume on a daily basis. So you fill the vessel, you fill the production capacity of that vessel on a daily basis, which will drive down costs. And then the last stat there to look at is that 515, that's sea days. That's the amount of days that we've kept the vessels at sea. So you can see that marked improvement from 2023, where unplanned breakdowns, maintenance periods kept -- we only kept the vessels at sea for 372 days. And this year, there's been a huge improvement in fishing days. From a market point of view, market is still very, very strong. That price increase that you see, export price, 10.9% increase in euro terms. The European -- Western European market is where the bulk of our hake is sold, and the market is hungry for hake at the moment. There's a global shortage of cod, which is the main competitor of ours, and that has driven price. So certainly not a problem to sell the product. The problem is we've got to maximize catch, which is certainly what we've done. So good performance from hake, volumes up, cost down and market very strong. Horse mackerel, unfortunately, not as positive as hake. This is predominantly in Namibia, where we operate 3 vessels. We -- our South African horse mackerel vessel, the Desert Diamond has had a very poor performance over the last 2 years. And in fact, what we did in the late -- latter part of last year sent the vessel to Namibia to assist the Namibian vessels to catch horse mackerel there. So it certainly wasn't a huge profitable exercise, but it certainly stopped the bleeding in SA because when she was fishing in SA, she certainly wasn't catching sufficient to cover her costs. At least in Namibia, she covered her cost and made some contribution to the Namibian performance. But you can see the catch rates, the yellow block there across the top left. Catch rates have remained fairly pedestrian over the last 4 or 5 years. And certainly at 70 to 80 tons, that's not the level that we would hope. And it is concerning. I'm certainly hoping with this change from El Niño to the more neutral phase that we'll see that start improving next year. But more concerning is the cost level. And that is driven by the 3 components is our own quota and certainly, we've got less and less of own quota. So we have to purchase quota from other quota holders and that comes at a cost. And then the maintenance cost of those vessels and the crew costs. So we've had low catch rates and high costs, which is concerning, and we really need to drive those catch rates up to take -- to improve this business. From a market point of view, affordable protein, which is where horse mackerel plays in Africa, is in high demand. So we simply can't supply the market enough. So we've had reasonable sales volumes, a slight increase in price. As you can see, the price has increased year-on-year for the last 3 years, but it's really to drive -- to try and bring those catch costs down, and that is a function of catch rates. And we're hoping in the next couple of years to see catch rates improve. On our 2 smaller businesses in this division, squid, and let me talk about squid. As you know, we invested last year in one of our oppositions sold their squid rights and we bought those squid routes. So we've increased the size of our business there. We've invested in the new vessel. Bottom left is our new Catamaran. It was commissioned 2, 3 weeks ago. The new season starts 1st of July, and that vessel will go out a very -- we've got latest technology and certainly will enhance the catchability. Remember, this is an effort-based fishery. You get x amount of licenses that you can catch and your vessel then over a period of a season can catch as much as possible. The more effective your vessel and the Catamaran have proved much more effective than the monohulls, the more effective you can give your crew an opportunity to catch fish. So that Catamaran will go into the sea in 1st of July. And certainly, there's been a nice improvement in catch rates, and we measure it per man per day, how many kilos a man can catch per day while he's at sea. So both in terms of sea days and in terms of catch per men that nice improvement in squid. And certainly, the market -- and remember, this is 100% exported mainly to Western Europe, and the market is very strong. So looking for some good things in squid over the next couple of seasons. Our 2 smaller operations on -- in lobster, West Coast and South Coast Lobster. There was an increase in West Coast rock lobster this year. Surprisingly, DAFF is telling us the resource despite the level of poaching has rebounded. So we got an increase in quota. And we fully caught all of our West Coast rock lobster by the end of April, which is unusual. So it certainly shows the abundance of West Coast lobster. South Coast lobster obvious is a deepwater lobster. So no levels of poaching. It is very difficult to get at. And that is -- that resource is very, very healthy. The one negative of South Coast lobster, a very small part of our business, is this is exported 100% to the U.S.A. So obviously, the tariffs and the tariff war that is playing out at the moment is going to impact this resource. At the moment, the tariff is at 10%. Certainly, we can live with it, but we don't know where this is going to end up, and it definitely has affected the demand for South Coast lobster into the U.S. because of the pricing barriers. It plays at the top end of the value chain. And when you start pushing additional price on top of a very affluent or expensive product, it does affect the market. And then Lucky Style Foods and really exceptional performance from this part of our business, again, around the strategy, drive volume. So we've seen increase in volume, we've seen increase in value, and we've seen an increase in operating margin. So a very pleasing performance from this team. And it's not only from the sales side, but also from the factory side. Again, last year, we closed our one cannery for 3 months of the year and the other cannery for 2 months of the year to invest in those lines to upgrade the efficiencies of the lines and the throughput. And that has played through both from an efficiency and the throughput. So sales volumes of 5.1 million cartons, a record for us on last year. A value increase of 5.6 million, about 4% of that was price increase and about 1.5% was in terms of mix. And then you can see in the bottom graph, that is the production that came through to our 2 factories. As you can see in 2024, we only produced 1.5 million cartons out of our 2 factories over the 6-month period, very little in the first 3 months and 1.3 million cartons in the second 3 months. This year, because we had the raw material, and I'll talk about the raw material now, we were able -- and the factories were up and running and we closed them for a very short period of time, we maximize production, and that came through in terms of efficiency gains. So we produced almost 3 million cartons in the 6-month period at our 2 factories, very, very positive performance. One of the strategic decisions we made this year, and Zaf will talk a bit when we talk about working capital. We were -- we tested it last year, and we started buying frozen product from the Pacific off the Japanese coast. And the reason we started doing that was we were very concerned about the supply and the biomass out of Mauritania and Morocco. The resource hasn't performed as well as it should over the last couple of years. And when we bought product from those 2 sources, we've seen mixed quality, varying sizes and mixed quality in terms of fat content. And it has affected our ability to produce and efficiencies of the factory. So we took a decision 2 years ago to test that resource and bought a fair amount of product. And then this year, in the October, November this period, we -- because we are concerned about product in the middle of the year being now out of Morocco, we went and bought heavily frozen product from the South Pacific. We bought almost 36,000 tons, and it came in over a very short period of time and put our logistics under strain. But certainly, in the long run, that has paid dividends. And right now, and we'll talk about pilchard now, there is a shortage of pilchard, fresh pilchard. And we're in a very, very good position in terms of not only having production in finished goods, but also having frozen goods in our cold stores that allows our factories to continue producing right until September when our next lot of frozen product will come in from the Pacific. So in a very, very good position. A strategic buy puts some pressure on our working capital, but that will wind itself out as the product gets consumed into the market. And as you see in the last point there, closing inventory levels up 41%. So we're sitting in a very, very healthy position right now to drive sales for the second month through Lucky Star. So very positive. Just in terms of the resource in South Africa, and obviously, you remember, Lucky Star is supplied by both frozen product that we import from around the world and local fresh catch, which obviously has a higher margin component because it is effectively free product. We don't buy it. We catch it ourselves. But the resources is -- it's been interesting. I spoke about the Africana. And the Africana's research has shown that there is a drop in biomass in pilchards, yet our vessels have not seen that effect. So we issued an interim quota because of the lateness of the Africana research of 35,000 tons last year. The total TAC was 65,000 tons. So they gave us an interim allocation. And our vessels went out and started catching. The catches have exceeded last year by far. And you can see on the right-hand side, a comparative catching point. We were -- we've caught -- that's our own quota of the 35,000. As of the end of March, we caught 9,000 tons. And as of the end of April, we've caught nearly 12,000 tons. And in fact, we've caught our full quota well in advance. Last year, this time, we caught only 6,000 tons. And in fact, by the end of the year, we didn't catch all our pilchard quota. So very, very different figures coming out from the research trip and what we're seeing out at sea. These -- obviously, these pilchards are helped -- our own fresh catch helped the results out of Lucky Star because obviously, it translates into production at a lower cost than frozen. On the brand -- on the marketing side, again, around the strategy, we introduced a new flavor. It certainly has it's taken off very nicely, the new peri-peri flavor in pilchards. We have started expanding into Africa. We've -- in the last 6 months of last year, we've gone into Ghana, and I visited Ghana a couple of weeks ago, very interesting market, very similar to South Africa in terms of eating habits. They also consume both canned pilchards and canned mackerel in a similar format to South Africa and Southern Africa. So it's known to them, very, very popular in Ghana. Obviously, Lucky Star as a brand is not known there. So we are embarking, and we've had some very nice offtake in the early part. We obviously have to drive the marketing side to get Lucky Star known. It's a high-quality brand, so doing very well. And then on the extension in terms of food, canned meat, which both includes chicken and meat, very nice offtake, in particular in the cross-border markets, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia. And then obviously, in the school feeding schemes, as I've spoken about before, the can chicken livers is going into the school feeding schemes and is really developing momentum now. We are introducing a second line in that business because there's certainly a lot of upside in terms of that offtake. Just in terms of the market, it's interesting to compare Lucky Star versus the SA food market. Top left-hand graph there is the value graph. And you can see in value terms and now this is not total Lucky Star Foods. This is just canned pilchards. We've seen a growth in the first -- in the last 6 months of 7.5% versus a food basket of 4.5%. And in the volume terms, 1.5% versus just over 0.4% from a volume. So in both categories, we are exceeding the food market, which is nice to see. And then as I spoke about in the export market, our Lucky Star certainly has done extremely well, and we've driven this export volume where we -- obviously, there's less competition and Lucky Star is certainly in demand in there. So you can see all of the percentages there, the growth percentage we're seeing in our cross-border market. So very positive, and that certainly will carry through into the second 6 months. So a very resilient canned fish market, and it's a symptom of where the consumers are at the moment. Consumers are constrained, and we're very conscious about pricing. Obviously, we are importing a large percentage of our production. It comes at the expense of a rand-dollar conversion. A favorable rand certainly suits us going forward from this division point of view. It's going to import product in the -- frozen product in the second half of this year and a stronger rand certainly supports this division. But we're very conscious about where the consumer is. And remember, we compete in the protein market, not in the canned pilchard market. And all of the canned proteins are competitors to Lucky Star pilchards. You might have heard, and I'm sure you're aware of the ban on Brazilian offal and Brazilian chicken because of the avian flu that has hit Brazil that has a positive and a negative potential effect on this business. Obviously, from a canned meat and a canned chicken, that may affect supply of offal, which is fully imported into those 2 products. But on the positive side, with the shortage of offal, the ability for all of the producers to produce sufficient polonies and which comes from the Brazilian imports will be restricted, which will have a positive effect on Lucky Star pouches. And we're not sure how that's going to play out. The ban still exists at the moment. There's a lot of work in trying to regionalize the ban. But as of this point in time, we've seen pricing of offal from the local producers increased substantially over the last couple of weeks, and that will play out over the next couple of weeks when we see what's going to happen with the ban. We have sufficient raw material to cover us certainly for the next 4 or 5 months. So we're in a reasonable position, but we're going to have to watch the space very closely. And with that, I will hand over to Zaf, and then I'll come back and conclude.

Zafar Mahomed

executive
#2

Thank you, Neville, and good morning, everyone. I will be covering the key features of our performance for the 6 months ending 31 March 2025. Detailed interim financial statements are included in the appendix to this presentation and the results booklet, which is available on our website. The strong performance by Lucky Star and an improvement in the Wild caught seafood business partially offset the decline in the group's profitability due to global fish oil prices correcting from record highs in the prior period. Revenue increased by 2.9% to ZAR 5.2 billion, primarily due to increased sales volume of canned food, fish meal and fish oil, hake and Namibian horse mackerel, together with firm pricing in Wild caught seafood. This revenue growth was offset by lower sales pricing for fishmeal and fish oil. The 33.5% reduction in operating profit to ZAR 676 million for the half year was primarily due to significantly lower fish oil prices, driven by the recovery in the Peruvian anchovy resource and production levels as global supply normalized. Headline earnings per share decreased by 43.9% to ZAR 324.9 per share due to the significant decline in U.S. earnings and an increase in net interest expense. An interim dividend of ZAR 1.10 per share has been declared compared to the ZAR 1.95 per share in the comparative period. The group's net debt-to-EBITDA ratio increased to 2.2x at the end of March 2025, primarily due to investment in working capital in Lucky Star and reduced profitability in Daybrook. Total operating profit has grown steadily, and the first half of 2025 compares favorably with the past 5 years. Excluding the disposed cold storage business, this was surpassed only by the record performance in the comparative period. On a segmental basis, the contribution of Daybrook to operating profit has reduced significantly from 83% in the prior period to 56% in the current period. Lucky Star Foods delivered strong results, supported by steady consumer demand, increased local production volumes and greater operational efficiencies following recent capital investment. Improved landings and plant performance contributed to better results in the fishmeal and fish oil Africa segment, while the decline in fish oil pricing negatively impacted Daybrook's profitability. The Wild Caught Seafood segment benefited from stronger heat catches in the second quarter, combined with firm pricing and insurance proceeds, which were related to vessel breakdown losses incurred in the prior year. Gross profit reduced to ZAR 1.4 billion and gross margin decreased to 27.8%, attributable to lower fishmeal and particular fish oil prices and a higher proportion of low value by catch and increased quota costs in the Namibian horse mackerel. The Lucky Star Foods margin increased driven by the higher local production volumes and improved efficiencies following canary upgrades in the previous financial year. Operating profit decreased by 33.5% to ZAR 676 million, mainly due to the lower gross margin at Daybrook. The growth in overhead expenditure of 3.4% was contained below inflation. Net interest expense increased to ZAR 144 million due to higher borrowing levels to fund the capital expenditure program implemented over the past few years and the investment in working capital during the current period. The renewal of the interest rate swap in the U.S. in February 2024 at higher rates, where 50% of the U.S. debt is hedged contributed to the increase. The effective tax rate increased to 24.3% due to the reduced earnings from the U.S. business, which is taxed at a lower rate. Profit after tax decreased by 43.7% to ZAR 402 million, driven mainly by the decline in operating profit of the U.S. segment and an increase in the net interest expense. The increase in net working capital was primarily driven by the strategic decision to change the geography and timing of frozen fish imports to ensure consistency of supply and to maximize quality and yields, resulting in comparatively higher inventory levels and Lucky Style Foods net working capital increasing by 38% to ZAR 1.6 billion. Net debt increased to ZAR 2.5 billion at the end of the period compared to ZAR 2.5 billion in March 2024. In South Africa, net debt rose by ZAR 995 million. During the second half of 2024, we converted ZAR 700 million into long-term debt and increased our total facilities to support our capital investment program. At the same time, the higher imports of frozen fish resulted in an increase in short-term facilities to fund our working capital investment. As a result of the increased borrowings, our net debt-to-EBITDA ratio rose to 3.7x. This was partially offset by EBITDA increasing by 14.5% from ZAR 688 million to ZAR 788 million, reflecting stronger underlying operating performance in South Africa. In the U.S., we saw a decrease in net debt due to term debt repayments, which was offset by lower cash generated from operations during the period. As a result, net debt-to-EBITDA increased from 0.4x to 0.7x. Net debt increased from $29 million to $33 million, and EBITDA declined from $74 million in the prior period to $44 million. At a group level, net debt-to-EBITDA rose from 1.2x in March 2024 to 2.2x in the current period. The group complied with all lender covenant requirements for both the South African and U.S. debt. Capital expenditure of ZAR 183 million was primarily related to dry docks and further upgrades to the hake and horse mackerel fleet, including the Desert Jewel freon conversion. As mentioned previously, we expect to spend a total of ZAR 342 million in 2025. This includes expansion CapEx of ZAR 75 million, bringing the total expansion CapEx over the 4-year period to ZAR 427 million. Our diversified business model, cash generation and strong balance sheet have allowed reinvestment throughout the business to benefit from the continued strong demand and pricing across our product range. The group has completed its capital investment program to upgrade its processing facilities and vessels. The focus has been on bedding down the capital spend to continue to deliver direct efficiency gains and will benefit future operational performance. An interim dividend of ZAR 1.10 per share has been declared compared to the ZAR 1.95 per share in the comparative period and is consistent with the decline in headline earnings per share. The factors that have been considered in determining the dividend include headline earnings levels, working capital investment, capital expenditure requirements and debt levels. The group delivered cash operating profit of ZAR 902 million for the 6 months to the end of March 2025, with South Africa contributing ZAR 442 million and the U.S. contributing ZAR 460 million. The higher Lucky Star frozen fish imports, combined with the strong trading experience in March were the primary drivers of the ZAR 892 million working capital change for the half year. The South African operations were the major contributor of the net interest paid for the period of ZAR 149 million. The group paid ZAR 381 million in dividends, which was a final dividend of ZAR 3.00 per share declared for the 2024 financial year. As a result of the aforementioned items, the group raised net debt of ZAR 802 million, resulting in the group's cash balances closing slightly higher at ZAR 827 million compared to the ZAR 760 million opening cash position. The strong Lucky Star inventory position will continue to support our ability to meet demand with the anticipated unwind of inventory supporting cash generation in the second half. The group continues to prioritize reducing debt, along with the prudent management of costs and capital expenditure. The capital invested in our business over the past few years has positioned Oceana for sustained growth and is expected to create long-term value for all shareholders. Thank you, and I hand you back to Neville, who will cover the outlook for the business.

Neville Brink

executive
#3

Thank you, Zaf. Okay. Where to over the next 6 months. And it really is just a continuation of that strategy I spoke about upfront. From a Lucky Star Foods point of view, continued volume growth, and I certainly believe that, that will continue. The demand for our Lucky Star product is strong. We have the product available and certainly, affordability is there. We'll continue with our brand extension. We are continuing to look at other opportunities to take the brand further than we currently do, and that is happening right now. Our factories certainly are operating extremely well, and we'll continue to drive efficiencies and maximize throughput through those 2 factories. The export volume remains a focus for us. There's a lot of demand in the export market and certainly, the margins and the throughput are there. So we will continue to drive that. And then as I spoke about, our inventory levels are certainly in a very, very positive position. We have the ability to drive sales and promote our products. So we're in a very good position in terms of supplying customer needs and service levels are at the 98% level. So very, very positive from that. So I expect Lucky Star to continue as we've seen in the first 6 months. On the Wild caught seafood side, vessels are operating well. We have had 0 unplanned breakdowns this year, and I would hope that would continue. So drive vessels at sea catch rates in particular, South Africa and the market will continue. We need to have a focus on Namibian cost reduction. It does concern me if the catch rates remain as the current -- as they are at the current where we have to take some costs out of the business, and that will be a key focus of that division and where they are. We have -- we will continue investing in our fleet, and there's some upgrades that are coming over the next 6 to 8 months, which will further enhance that fleet. And then obviously, the new Catamaran, I'm looking forward to seeing that vessel go to sea in July and see how she operates. I visited the vessel a couple of weeks ago, very impressed with the technology we put on the vessel, and I'm looking for good things from that vessel. On the fishmeal and oil side, obviously, pricing is concerning. We can't do anything about pricing, and I think there's been a slight overcorrection. So we are concerned about where pricing will end up. We are currently negotiating, obviously, for our contracts on both oil and meal in the salmon and pet food industry. I expect Peru to catch this 3 million tons. The second season hasn't been announced. That only gets announced in the next couple of months, and then we'll see where that goes. From a local catch point of view, the herring remains strong. Our best -- obviously, we're going into winter. So winter does affect the ability to pertain, and our vessels cannot operate in high seas. But certainly, the product is there. We will see if biomass -- sorry, anchovy biomass makes appearance. We're waiting for the research -- there's a second research trip happening on Africana. She comes back in the end of June, and there will be an announcement on all of the species in South Africa, and it will be interesting to see what that comes out. And then obviously, the tariff landscape is a concern for us across the board. Negotiations are happening right now between the U.S. and the European Union, which could and may affect our oil exports. Remember, all of our oil goes to Europe. And then a portion of our fishmeal does go to China, although the seems to have settled to some sort of arrangement there with a 10% tariff on Chinese imports -- Chinese exports from the U.S. But that still is playing out, and I don't think we've seen the end of that -- the effect of what's happening on the tariff landscape. So certainly, I think strong performance from Lucky Star and Wild caught, fishmeal and oil. I think given where the pricing of oil is, in particular, I think we'll certainly I don't expect that to change in the short term. What I do expect is to see if we can have a decent catch out of the U.S. this year with our -- with the early part of the season being very positive, and let's hope that translates into the second half with a decent catch out of the U.S. So I think I'll leave it at that and happy to take any questions from the audience.

Unknown Executive

executive
#4

Zaf, we have a few questions on the line. First one is from Lwando at All Weather Capital. Do you have a view on the protein pricing environment with chicken and beef prices increasing, do you anticipate consumers switching to your Lucky Star brands for protein?

Zafar Mahomed

executive
#5

It's a difficult question to say switching. I think there will be increased demand for our product. As I spoke about the ban on imported product coming into the market and the potential shortage of polony, which is a staple in our market. Chicken is definitely going to go up. We haven't planned a price increase for the second 6 months, and I don't think we will. So we will hold our pricing. We're in a very strong position from a supply point of view. So certainly, if there is an increase in pricing on chicken and a shortage of polonies, I think it will translate into increased sales of Lucky Star.

Unknown Executive

executive
#6

Second question from Olwethu at Prescient Securities. Do you believe this is the new normalized fish oil price around about $3,000 per ton? If not, where do you expect it to be?

Neville Brink

executive
#7

My answer to that is there is no normal. It does depend on supply and demand. I think long-term, as I spoke about earlier, long-term, you'll have a continuous increase in demand as aquaculture industry continues to grow to supply the world food market. There is a finite supply of raw material. So in the long-term, I see you'll continue to see an increase in price. In the short term, I think pricing will stay at its current levels till the early part of next year, and then we'll have to see what the Peruvian cash looks like.

Unknown Executive

executive
#8

Thanks, Neville. From [indiscernible] at [indiscernible]. Talk more about the current shortage of pilchards and why you are well placed currently? Will it be -- will it benefit volumes or price? You already own the category, so it won't necessarily help with direct competitors.

Neville Brink

executive
#9

So as I spoke about, we've -- the industry has effectively caught all of the interim allocation, the 35,000 tons of pilchards that have been issued to us so far. The research strip only comes back at the end of June, and then they will decide whether based on the research, whether they'll give us a second allocation. Most of the industry don't have frozen product as Oceana has in storage to keep their factories going. So there will be a shortage of competitive can pilchards, quite right that we own -- we dominate the market. So that -- but it does help us in terms of cost recoveries through our factories, which the other businesses don't have. I do believe that, that will assist in terms of bottom line.

Unknown Executive

executive
#10

Thanks, Neville. Another one from Murray. How are you approaching export markets, especially the rest of Africa? How are you getting cash out?

Zafar Mahomed

executive
#11

Certainly, our export markets that we export and obviously, that would be horse mackerel in Africa is mainly horse mackerel. And all of the countries that we export to, there's free cash flow. So our main SADC countries, Mozambique, Zambia, Zimbabwe, DRC, certainly, it's on a cash upfront basis, so we don't have a problem. So I'm not concerned about cash coming in from Africa.

Unknown Executive

executive
#12

Thanks, I think there's one more on the list, which I think you've answered, but you may want to add something additional also from Lwando at All Weather Africa. Do you anticipate a chicken liver shortage given the import ban on Brazilian chicken imports?

Neville Brink

executive
#13

At the moment, we have sufficient stock to cover sort of 3 or 4 months. If there's not a decision by agriculture, the Minister of Agriculture to regionalize the ban, then I think there will be a shortage of chicken livers. If -- remember, the avian flu has only been picked up in a small portion of Brazil in the southern part of Brazil. Brazil is obviously a huge country. And the majority of Brazil is avian free, avian flu-free. So if there is -- if the ban is changed in the short term, I don't think there'll be a shortage. If it continues for the next couple of months, there will be a shortage. And certainly, the South African poultry industry doesn't have the ability to supply the quantities of MDM, mechanically debone chicken and offal because they simply don't produce it. They can substitute the bone-in product, but there's approximately 35,000 tons of product that's been imported monthly into South Africa. Only about 4% to 6% is bone-in. The balance is offal, which is simply not available in the -- from the South African Poultry Association. So potentially, it is going to be a problem because not only us, but there are many producers that produce -- that import MDM that produce the polonies, which is a staple in the market.

Unknown Executive

executive
#14

Another one from [ Murray ] at [indiscernible]. Daybrook landings are on par with the poor prior season so far, but your outlook for the remainder of the season seems positive.

Neville Brink

executive
#15

Yes. Certainly, it started off fairly slow, and we were concerned about it, but it's picked up quite nicely. Last week, we landed 32 million fish. And if you take the 7-week period, we are actually now well ahead of last year and very close to the 5-year average. All the signs from our partner, Westbank, is that there's a very strong sign of fish, combined with the investments we've put into that fishery with the jet engines and the weekend fishing, weather aside, I think that it bodes well for a good season out of the U.S., which obviously helps us to counter some of the drop in pricing with a higher volume.

Unknown Executive

executive
#16

Thanks, Neville. Neville, I think those are the questions that we have.

Neville Brink

executive
#17

I really thank everybody that joined the line, and I look forward to the one-on-ones and the meeting with you over the next week. Thank you very much for joining us. Bye-bye.

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