Origin Enterprises plc (OIZ) Earnings Call Transcript & Summary
September 26, 2023
Earnings Call Speaker Segments
Operator
operatorGood day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Origin Enterprise plc 2023 Preliminary Results Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Sean Coyle. Please go ahead.
Sean Coyle
executiveThank you, Nadia. Good morning, everybody, and thank you for joining the Origin Preliminary Results Presentation for FY '23. I'm joined here this morning by my colleagues, TJ Kelly, our CFO; and Brendan Corcoran, our Head of Investor Relations. We're delighted to be bringing you a good set of results this morning with operating profit and EPS at the upper end of guidance, and a strong cash performance resulting in another year-end net cash position. 2023 included some pockets of weather challenges in the Northern Hemisphere at both key application time and a harvest time. And the market also saw volatile commodity pricing with both grain and fertilizer raw materials moving from high levels midway through the year to significantly lower levels before stabilizing just prior to year-end. Despite that, the business delivered a solid operating performance, and we had a particularly strong cash performance assisted somewhat by these falling prices and lower stock levels due to the business going risk of with falling prices and only replenishing where we saw firm demand. For the last 2 years, we have returned over EUR 90 million to shareholders via dividends and buybacks, and we have a commitment to increasing dividends and doing a minimum of a further EUR 20 million in buybacks over the next 3 years. We spent EUR 30 million on acquisition activity in the last 12 months to drive a new growth area for the business in nature-based solutions for the immunity environment and ecology segment, which will help us diversify away from the dependence on Irish and U.K. agriculture, which we saw in FY '20 can leave the business vulnerable in a bad weather year. This segment has grown from 7% of profit to 12% of profit in the current year. And even in the absence of new acquisitions, is capable of being 14% to 15% of group profit in FY '24. We are delivering on all of the metrics set out at our Capital Markets Day presentation, and thanks to all of our people, I'm confident that we will continue to deliver on the ambition set out at our 2022 Capital Markets Day. So I'll open with the forward-looking safe harbor statement as normal and walk you through the results presentation. The business delivered from a financial, operational and strategic perspective in a strong way with EUR 90 million of operating profit, down from last year's unusually large figure but ahead from an operating profit perspective of any group operating profit for fully owned entities at any time in the company's past. We also saw our EPS exceed the upper end of guidance. Free cash flow was strong at EUR 104 million, delivering a very strong free cash flow conversion. And we've been the beneficiary of continuing to hold on to sanctioned payments through the current financial year as we were at last year's financial year-end. Return on capital employed is 12.6% inside our target range of 12% to 15%. And we're announcing today an uplift in dividend for the year of 5%, bringing total dividends for the year to 16.8%. From an operational perspective, the business did extremely well in managing its way through very challenging operating trading conditions, as I outlined in the opening statement. We did have recovery in volumes in the Northern Hemisphere following a challenging Q3 weather period where the application period was severely hampered in the U.K., in particular. And we had strong organic growth in our Latin American business aided, of course, by favorable currency, which contributed about 13% of the 60% uplift in profit. Post year-end, our Ukrainian business will wind down at the end of September. Unfortunately, trading conditions there have not improved. But as most listeners to this call will know, the business has been a breakeven level or loss-making at an operating profit level, and we have lost significant money after interest and tax in that market for a number of years. So we've made the decision that we will close the business because we don't see operating conditions improving in that jurisdiction for the foreseeable future. From a strategic perspective, the Amenity, Environmental and Ecology business is expanding, driven principally by acquisition in the period with the acquisition of Keystone, Agrigem, British Hardwood Trees, and Neo Environmental. And post year-end, we added another business Suregreen, to the overall constituents of that segment of the business. Brendan and the team continue to do fantastic work on progressing our ESG strategy. We have delivered a carbon transition plan to 2032, which is the foundation of the science-based targets, which have been submitted to SBTI for approval, and we hope to get back in the coming weeks. And we're also continuing to work on developing our nurturing growth sustainability strategy and environmental policy. And the business continues to invest in organic growth as well. So we have invested in production expansion for our FoliQ business in Poland, we have a number of expansion projects underway to expand the Brazilian operation, and we're working on expanding some of the production capabilities of our Romanian business as well with coated fertilizer projects and a micro pack project underway there. We're in the middle of an ERP rollout amongst our Ireland and U.K. businesses and our Goulding business is the most recent to have gone live, and we expect to put our Agri business live before the end of this calendar year, and a number of our remaining businesses over the course of 2024 -- calendar 2024. And we are fast tracking our bio-solutions business with the introduction of a new F1rst Agbiotech biotech business alongside our Fortgreen business in Brazil. So to dive into some of the individual segments in a little bit more detail, the Ireland and U.K. business had a reduction in profit from EUR 94.5 million last year to just under EUR 58 million this year. But the business coped well with the challenging weather conditions and a more normalized year of trading, particularly the raw material price volatility, which we experienced over the major part of the year. We continue to see innovations coming into our pipeline from a nutrition perspective, from a bio-solutions perspective, where we're working on a green list of products, and our digital portfolio as well. And the business was recently awarded the Enterprise Ireland Innovation Award for our GrassMax tool here in the Irish marketplace. We delivered strong growth within our Amenity, Environmental and Ecology division, and we've broadened our service and product capability through acquisition in the period. So we're happy with the performance of the Ireland and U.K. business. Within that particular segment of Amenity, Environmental and Ecology, you can see there that revenue growth from the time that we essentially commenced expansion into this space in 2022 and beyond, has accelerated from a historical level of EUR 50 million to EUR 60 million. And the business continues to see growth both in the nature-based solutions and landscaping area as well as into the more advice and services-led area from the acquisition of Keystone and Neo Environmental. So we're happy that, that business can continue to grow. It is delivering an operating margin in excess of our Agri businesses and is typically a capital-light business, so a low level of working capital and a low level of assets dedicated to that particular business. So return on capital employed should be very strong in this particular area. In terms of our Continental European business, we did see a jump in profitability and in particular, excluded from the EUR 15.8 million number, which you can see in orange on this page, we also had a strong performance in our grain trading Business, which contributed a further EUR 1.5 million of profitability in FY '23. The business continues to see higher return on capital employed metrics over the course of the last 5 and 6 years as we have reduced working capital dedicated to this business over time and continue to maintain growth and profitability. You will remember that some of the earlier years in this period contained a profitable Ukraine business in 2018 and also our Pillaert business, our Belgian fertilizer business, which was disposed of in 2021. So the business continues to see growth. We're happy with the performance of the business. But unfortunately, we have had to close our Ukrainian business and that will close in the coming days. We think that, that will have minimal impact on the overall regional operating profit reported in FY '24. Our Latin American business saw continued growth. And again, from the time of acquisition in 2019, profits were suppressed somewhat with unfavorable currency movements over the course of 2020 and 2021, which saw the reduction in the reported Euro number, even though our Brazilian real number have been showing increases at that time. But since then, the improvement in currency has allowed us to see improvement in Euro reported number to EUR 9.7 million last year and a EUR 15.7 million figure in 2023. So we're extremely happy with the performance of this business. We continue to dedicate capital to building out capacity, and we have expanded our distribution facilities there and are in the course of expanding our production capacity and capability, which should allow us meet growing demand over the next 3 to 4 years. We've also launched the F1rst Agbiotech brand at the tail end of FY '23. Sales are negligible in this period but we are seeing strong early sales performance in FY '24. And we expect to see and have completed the 35% put and call option, which buys out the remaining 35% from the founders of the Fortgreen business and that was executed post year-end. You will remember that we have been, because that put and call option was always going to be exercised reporting the Fortgreen profitability on a fully consolidated basis since we acquired the entity. So there's no uplift in profit from the acquisition of that 35%. We've always reported that profitability on a fully consolidated basis. So I'll hand over to TJ, who will talk you through the financial performance.
T. Kelly
executiveThanks, Sean. So just to touch off some of the highlights on financial performance. Revenue growth overall at 5.5% on an underlying basis breaks out into pricing growth of just under 12% and volume decline of about 6%. And that's very much a story of the first and second half, whereby in the first half, we had very strong pricing inflation of circa 40%, and then as markets started to retreat, we saw a pricing deflation impact in the second half of about 5% or so. So that revenue performance in the full year, as I say, very much a story of inflation being a key feature of the first half and then deflation impacting in the second half. Adjusted EPS then, as Sean said, we're ahead of guidance, which was EUR 0.50 to EUR 0.53. I'm very pleased with the EPS performance and driven by what was a good close out to the year-end despite some challenging weather conditions, and while our operating profit is behind FY '22, it does represent an historically high EBIT delivery for the group. Looking then at free cash flow. Free cash flow was positively impacted again by a strong working capital inflow in the year that working capital performance was impacted by those lower primarily fert and feed raw material pricing feeding through. So the unwind of those inflated levels of working capital really benefiting us in the second half. And we also had a favorable timing impact of purchases and sales offtakes during that second half as we tightly managed our stock positions only buying where demand existed. And the delay really of buying behavior in the second half fed through to that working capital benefit as well. As we bought later on the back of later demand, and that has a positive impact in terms of collecting cash but not paying suppliers until typically post the year-end. We also had the benefit -- continued benefit of withheld payments to sanctioned parties. And for FY '24, we do expect some working capital outflow as volumes, we'd anticipate would return to more normalized levels during FY '24. And we're also likely see -- likely to see the impact at least of some of the sanctioned payments being made through FY '24. And that free cash flow then in turn translated again into a very strong net cash position at the year-end where we were positive in terms of net cash of just over EUR 53 million, again, consistent with last year, where we ended in a cash positive position of just over EUR 43 million. In terms of capital deployment then, in addition to the dividends and buyback that we completed, we invested, again, as Sean mentioned, across the M&A space in the business as outlined, and we had a EUR 28 million in strategic CapEx, which I will come back to a little bit later. Just to give an overview then of our progress against the capital market the target ambition for the 5-year period, FY '22 to FY '26. As you can see there, against the operating profit target of EUR 115 million over that 5-year period, 2 years in, we are just over 50% delivered from an operating profit perspective. And from a free cash flow perspective, again, we had targeted cumulative free cash flow of EUR 325 million for that 5-year period and 2 years into the plan, we are 66% delivered. You Will recall, of course, that in that 5-year plan, we did anticipate and cater for a bad weather year event. Looking then at it again at free cash flow, very strong metrics in terms of overall absolute free cash flow and free cash flow percentage. And balance sheet in terms of financing metrics, again, very strong, primarily as a result of the net cash position that we finished the year end in. From a facilities perspective, again, I would say, well financed our facilities, the bulk of our facilities run out through to 2026. Looking then at capital allocation. In just a little more detail, our M&A spend of EUR 30 million is across Agrigem, Neo Environmental, Keystone, British Hardwood Trees, and we also spent EUR 28 million on strategic CapEx. The key drivers of that strategic CapEx investment were continued investment in D 365 or ERP rollout across the Ireland and U.K. businesses. Of approximately EUR 11 million, other digital investments of about EUR 3 million. And then we continue to progress the development of the FoliQ plant in Poland. CRF and physiology nutrition capacity in Brazil and enhancing our investments across our feed businesses are the other key part of that investment. From a shareholder return perspective, then we're proposing a final dividend of EUR 0.1365, which will bring this full FY '23 dividend to EUR 0.1608 an increase of 5%, and that represents a payout ratio up 36%, which is broadly in line with the target payout ratio that we set at the Capital Markets Day of 35%. And again, our goal and target is to be a progressive dividend player. I'm pleased to be able to do that in the current year. Read the share buybacks, and we've completed EUR 60 million overall of our targeted of EUR 80 million to complete by FY '26. So that would imply a EUR 20 million buyback to be done over the course of the next the next 3 years or so. So with that, I'll hand it back to Sean.
Sean Coyle
executiveThanks, TJ. In terms of our strategic progression, you can see there that the macro growth drivers for the business. From our perspective, our sustainable agronomy, the responsiveness of the food supply chain globally and also the emerging nature economy in terms of driving the sustainable land use team, which is at the heart of our strategic thinking. And how we win in that is transitioning our own product and services portfolio towards a better set of products, which are more geared towards the environmental transition that Europe, in particular, is going to have to take, continuing to develop and build market-leading business models across our portfolio of businesses and also accelerating our participation in the environmental and ecological markets in the provision of nature-based solutions. So we think we've done reasonably well in this regard over the course of FY '23 and some of the highlights that we want to call out here are continued investment in digital agronomy, including the grass measurement capability and nutrient management planning as part of that. The development of the F1rst Agbiotech business as part of our product portfolio in Brazil, we're continuing to work on enhancing the nitrogen efficiency of our fertilizers through continued refinement of product and product development. We're expanding portfolio of fertilizer capability in Poland, and we're continuing to develop the landscaping and forestry product offering within our Amenity businesses. For 2024, we are working on additional research, which will allow the nitrogen use efficiency of crops improved by 20% over the course of the year. Agri have an existing maximizing arable performance benchmarking project across part of its portfolio. And what we're looking to do is try and digitize that and get it into our digital tool. The product and services portfolio will also see improvement in our micro pack production facilities in Timisoara in Romania and the rollout of fertilizer coating facilities in our Romanian business. We're also investing in Latin American production capacity to continue to drive the growth there and allow growth for another 3 or 4 years and developing natural inhibitors for our products to allow for slow release of product on field. Our M&A pipeline is reasonably active. There's certainly no transactions close to completion at this point in time but we've got very active dialogue with a wide range of businesses across U.K., Ireland, North America and also in Western Europe. We continue to see ourselves expanding the number of distribution outlets, particularly in our Environmental and Ecology market. And we also see ourselves enhancing our online capabilities. So as part of the Go-Live of some of our businesses on D 365 will also be rolling out online portals as part of that particular rollout. At our Capital Markets Day in 2022, we set out objectives for the business in this slide exactly, and I'm pleased to say we are ticking the box in that regard in terms of delivering on both strengthening the foundations of the business but also investing for growth. So we continue to invest in our people and try and attract the best talent of the organization. We're continuing to improve our use of technology through our digital tools and online capability. The business has definitely maintained that working capital discipline that we've introduced over the last few years, and we continue to see product innovation and change in product mix to enhance margin in our existing businesses to deliver organic growth. In terms of growth of the businesses from, I suppose, an inorganic perspective, we have seen an Ecology services acquisition. We've seen bolt-ons in our landscaping business. We've broadened our Amenity service offering by continuing to invest in adjacent businesses, and we're seeing growth in our biologicals business through the investment in F1rst Agbiotech but also development of new biological products across the Agri products and our OAS brands. Brendan, you might just walk us through the sustainability slide.
Brendan Corcoran
executiveThank you, Sean. At the core of our group, I suppose we're very cognizant of the fact that we have a key role to play in supporting our customers in navigating the evolving regulatory environment and also helping them and supporting them in their transition towards net zero environment. So we've always placed both near market research at the center of our offering to customers, and this has enabled us to develop novel products and novel solutions to help our customers on the ground. So over the past decade, we have come out with new products such as our prescription fertilizer offering as well as using productivity at the center and core of what we're doing to deliver for our customers. Within the last 2 years, we have started to shift our product offering to focus more on soil health. So we brought out our soil resilient strategy as well as developing carbon calculators for our fertilizer products. To guide us over the coming years and to support our target position plan, we have introduced a number of KPIs for the group. One of those at the center is improving nitrogen use efficiency by 20%, that's when encompass our -- all-encompassing product offering between the services such as digital and looking at nutrient management plans as well as the product offering that we deliver in the fertilizers business. As Sean has alluded to earlier, we're also looking at the biological area, and we have a KPI to fast-track biologicals across the group. And this will be supported with the launch of the F1rst Agbiotech business in Brazil. Notwithstanding what we're doing for our customers, we're also looking internally at our own business operations. And over the past 12 months, we have had a very strong focus on what Origin can do within its own operations to reduce its emissions and footprint. We have created a carbon transition plan and also developed KPIs that we have submitted to science-based target to reduce our emissions across Scope 1, Scope 2 and the full supply chain emissions in the group. This has been recognized and our efforts have been recognized to our ratings, and you have seen raising improvements across CDP, MSCI and Sustainalytics over the past 12 months as well. TJ, I'll hand over to you.
T. Kelly
executiveThanks, Brendan. So in summary then, I think overall, we would say we're very pleased with the performance in FY '23 in the context of what were volatile markets, particularly as we go into the second half. We continue to deliver on our M&A strategy, very much focused on building out our second core in the area of net Amenity, Environmental and Ecology subsegment. I'm pleased with the M&A activity that has been delivered through FY '23. As Brendan outlined, sustainability is very much at the core of our customer offering, and that's equally supported by commitment to best practice within our own operations within the organization. Cash generation, again, has been a highlight in the future of FY '23 and indeed, the previous year also, and that's very much a continued focus for us in the businesses to drive that EBIT to free cash flow conversion as we look out over '24. Looking then at capital allocation. We continue to pursue a disciplined approach to capital allocation to drive shareholder returns. And indeed, to say our ultimate objective is to drive those shareholder returns through a combination of margin accretive acquisitions and continuing to mine and improve the margin profile across the business and doing that within the hurdle rates of return on capital employed of 12% to 15%. So pleased that we're delivering that on a on an overall portfolio basis through FY '23. Dividends and return to shareholders continue to be an important part of our focus. And again, pleased with the increase in dividend of 5% for FY '23 and also our ability to be able to complete the share buyback through FY '23, again, in the order of EUR 20 million. So our focus very much for '24 is on driving that sustainable growth and pleased with the fact that we're on track to deliver our ambitions that we set out in our overall Capital Markets Day in May of 2022. So with that, we'll hand it over for Q&A, please. Thanks, Nadia.
Operator
operator[Operator Instructions] And the question comes from the line of Jason Molins from Goodbody.
Jason Molins
analystIf you don't mind, I've just got three that I want to touch on firstly, on the Amenity business. It's very helpful with the additional detail that you've given us there. But can you give us a sense for the organic growth that you're seeing in that business at the moment? And with some of the acquisitions that you've done over the past while, have you seen any revenue synergies across some of your platforms? Second question, just looking ahead to the planting season, given where some crop prices are but also some of the input costs as well. Any color on farm sentiment at the moment? And how do you see that impacting the planting season in the coming months, particularly in the U.K? And then final question really on LATAM. In terms of the F1rst Agbiotech business that you mentioned, how does that product range differentiate between some of the existing businesses and offerings that you have? How do you see that opportunity going forward Agbiotech?
Sean Coyle
executiveJason, I'll take the Amenity question first. So, across the Amenity businesses, we had a little bit of a tale of two halves. So within our Amenity portfolio, we obviously have some fertilizer businesses, including our own manufacturing facility within the PB Kent business, which is reliant on natural gas as the principal source of production for the specialty fertilizer that we're making there. And that business saw a pretty significant dip in profitability in 2023. So it was well back because of natural gas prices through the year. So overall, our Amenity businesses apart from that, so kind of mid-single-digit growth. We're not really seeing revenue synergies yet from the acquisitions that we've bolted on. But that's an ongoing piece of work to try and pull together commercial opportunities, and we do see opportunity across the various businesses we've acquired. You'll have to remember that, really, they've only be coming in piece meal over the last kind of 6 to 9 months and are not all fully consolidated yet and fully kind of up and running yet in terms of commercial interaction with other businesses. So there is opportunity there. There's a piece of work ongoing to try and drive some revenue synergies, procurement synergies, I think, because we have some common suppliers across these businesses and there would be opportunity as well in terms of broadening of product range in certain businesses that doesn't currently exist but where we provide alternative products in another part of the group. So, for example, our British Hardwood Trees range could certainly be seen in our Green-tech business or be seen in the Suregreen business, and we could supply those through those two distribution outlets. Similarly, our Suregreen business has a reasonably restricted product range when you compare it to the Green-tech business but equally, we will see ourselves being able to expand more of the Green-tech range of product, including soils and substrates for roof gardens into the south of the country where currently we don't have distribution locations. So there will be opportunities, and they will come to fruition over the coming 6 to 12 months in that space. Maybe, TJ, I'll let you answer the next one.
T. Kelly
executiveYes. So Jason, in terms of planting generally in farm sentiment, I suppose maybe take that Northern Hemisphere, Southern hemisphere. Northern hemisphere wise, I suppose harvests generally have been later driven by weather but harvester largely complete at this stage and yields are probably sold, so [ will be ] back slightly but planting conditions generally are good. U.K. was anticipating a need for some warmer weather. But generally, the expectation is that winter feed, for example, will be back up around the 1.8 million hectares or so far for 2024. But we'll update on that in our Q1 announcement. Farm sentiment is, I mean we'd say generally cautious. So again, as you'll be aware, soft commodities, both dairy, the grains and oils on the global markets have generally been soft. We'd look at, for example, feed, wheat in the U.K. at kind of GBP 200 per ton has been a key benchmark. Below bridge farmer sentiment tends to get a little bit softer, it's been in around GBP 180, GBP 190 per tonne over the last number of weeks. Input costs, I suppose, to counterbalance have been softening, albeit in the recent number of weeks, fertilizer has been firming again nowhere significantly as last year. But I suppose that's creating an overall sense of cautiousness buying decisions across the trade right down to farm level, I suppose, have been characterized being -- by being later generally. So a lack of commitment to going long on stock both in the trade and at farm level, I suppose has been a feature. So caution is probably key word, I would say, in terms of across our CE, U.K. and Irish businesses in terms of buying behaviors. From a LATAM for Green perspective, it's obviously, it's our busy season right now. And generally, farm sentiment is good while soya price in particular, has been a little bit softer, it's still high relative to history, yields have generally been good. So generally, say, farm sentiment in our Brazil business is in pretty good shape. So yes, I would say overall, Northern Hemisphere cautious. Brazil is generally positive but Planting conditions obviously, which are important for us from a Northern Hemisphere perspective, are generally good, and that's obviously a critical piece for us in terms of a base for full year performance in FY '24.
Sean Coyle
executiveAnd I think your third question was biological products, right, Jason?
Jason Molins
analystYes. The F1rst Agbiotech, just a bit more color on that? And what are the opportunities...
Sean Coyle
executiveYes. So I mean we've launched there with, I suppose, products initially across kind of 4 sub brands within the Brazilian operation. We're not expecting a very significant sales result there over the course of the next 12 months. It will be a slow burn. I would imagine that at most we'd be looking at about $10 million worth of sales over a 12-month period, maybe a little bit more than that. But, the business is up and running. It needs to be in a separate physical location because the regulatory environment for biological products. Is different to the core fertilizer product range and physiological nutrition range that we have within the Fortgreen business. So we've got a separate premises and a very strong academic team there of kind of postdoctoral researchers involved in the development of products. But we're also taking in products from other sources of IP and marketing them on behalf of other companies as well. So it's a combination of using our existing sales infrastructure and our broader sales infrastructure to market other people's innovation as well as developing our own product range.
Operator
operator[Operator Instructions] And the next question comes from the line of Cathal Kenny from Davy.
Cathal Kenny
analystFirstly, to TJ, just on working capital. Can you talk us through the moving parts as you see it for FY '24? And maybe build out that into your net debt assumptions as well for the year ahead? The second question just relates to your green listed to product, Sean. Obviously, you're making good progress on transitioning the portfolio. Would it be possible to comment on what you're seeing from the supply base? The key chem manufacturers in terms of crop protection? And seed in terms of just the progress they're making as well around these key green initiatives. And my final question then is on M&A as you look into the years ahead. Should we expect a similar type of profile in terms of the assets you've acquired and companies you've acquired more recently within the Ecology horticultural segment? Or could there be something more meaningful?
T. Kelly
executiveThanks, Cathal. I'll deal with the first question on working capital first. Yes. So as I said, with very strong inflow in working capital in FY '23, pricing and timing were the two key dynamics of that. It somewhat challenging to kind of parse out between what's pricing and timing specifically, just given the nature of working capital. But maybe if I pitch it forward to FY '24, what I would say is that underlying, we will see working capital outflow would anticipate working capital outflow, excluding the impact of sanctions with the sanctions payments, which I'll come back to, which is a natural really rebuild of inventory and it's a correction of the timing benefit that we had in FY '23, just passed that I mentioned, rough order of magnitude that the nature of that timing reversal could be in the order of EUR 40 million to EUR 50 million. The other impact that we will see is sanctions. Where we are -- there is a potential or likelihood that some of the sanctions money that we are withholding will outflow in FY '24. That's work in progress, as we have mentioned before, and we're working very closely with the relevant central banks across the European jurisdictions where this is impacting but for forecasting purposes, we're anticipating an outflow related to those sanction withheld payments. The other key outflow that we -- that has already been incurred in FY '24, is the put and call, exercising of the put and call option in Fortgreen, which was EUR 32 million. That liability we had on the balance sheet at the end of July, that has subsequently been paid. So if you take the round sums of an underlying working capital outflow in that order of EUR 40 million to EUR 50 million, the impact of the Fortgreen deferred consideration payment. And then we have the usual interest tax, capital expenditure, and this is pre any M&A or other capital allocation, I think it's reasonable to assume at this point, and it is obviously very early in the year, Cathal but it's reasonable to assume that net debt-to-EBITDA would likely be in excess of 1x EBITDA possibly be up to 1.5x EBITDA at the end of at the end of FY '24, just to give you kind of a rough order of magnitude at this point. I mean, we'll obviously calibrate that further as we get into the year but just the broad buckets of likely movement in working capital, in particular that's how we would see it.
Sean Coyle
executiveOkay. In terms of green list of products, there's a number of areas, I suppose, active there, Cathal. I mean, as you know, a lot of the crop protection R&D manufacturers, the larger ones are buying up biologicals businesses globally and trying to consolidate them into their businesses in order to develop a more biological range or a range further away from synthetic chemistry. So that piece of work ongoing as part of our supplier base. In addition to that, we've got lots and lots of small operators who are developing bio products. And we would have seen about 220, 240 of those over the course of the last 12 months and some of those will go through the R&D process. We are currently investing in a new temperature-controlled environment, which will sit in Throws Farm, which will allow us to control temperature, humidity, light, heat, et cetera, and run accelerated tests on the viability of biological products and products, which are making claims in relation to their efficacy, and that will allow us to narrow down what we bring through to the sale process and stand over some of the claims that some of these smaller companies who don't have as big an R&D arm are making claims in relation to. So we've got to do our own testing in relation to that efficacy. But separate to that, then on the fertilizer side of the house, there's a couple of areas where we're examining change. And most of those involve pragmatic coating of products to delay emission into the soil to allow the nitrates going to the soil on a slower basis and that, I suppose, escape into the atmosphere. That's the principal area the addition of micronutrients and different blends of products, which we've been doing over the last few years, which essentially derive the same yield from a lower nitrogen content product. And then in addition to that, newer areas are the development of things like green ammonia, which is available in the European market now, but probably at price levels, which are not competitive with standard fertilizers. So we can get our hands on green ammonia but they're not really competitive in terms of price point relative to other technologies. And therefore, farmers are not really interested in the product at this point. And we're also dealing with other players who are producing digestate from anaerobic digesters or food production systems, which essentially produces a low-energy at additive, which could be added into a fertilizer blend but certainly doesn't have the right component of nitrogen to promote significant growth. So we may look at that being part of a fertilizer blend but not a significant part of a fertilizer blend. It can be a dusty product and difficult to handle as part of the overall fertilizer mix but these things are continuing to improve over time. So we're kind of adding those types of products, including green ammonia to our, I suppose, horizon scanning in terms of what's available out there for future product use. And then, just to come back to the question around profile of assets that we might acquire. Yes, I would say that it's typically an unconsolidated market, Cathal. So there are I would say, a handful of private equity-owned bigger players in the consulting space that may become available over the course of the next while. But whether we're competitive in that space, given our own EV/EBITDA multiple and we've got to give consideration to, are we better off buying our own share? Or are we better off paying over the odds in terms of EV/EBITDA multiple for other players that come to market. Certainly, the smaller players that are available at reasonable multiples, as you'll have seen from the acquisitions that we've made in the last 12 months. So we can continue to bolt-on businesses at reasonable EV/EBITDA multiples. There are bigger players out there that we could accelerate a transition into this segment should we so wish. But they may just be available at multiples, which are not in keeping with what we'd be prepared to pay or look out of line with our own EBITDA multiple.
Operator
operator[Operator Instructions] We're going to take our next question. And the question comes from the line of Kevin Fogarty from Numis Securities.
Kevin Fogarty
analystThanks for the presentation and the opportunity. If I could have three questions, please. So the first one is just really on CapEx. Kelly, you talked about strategic CapEx going forward. LATAM, obviously, in Poland, in particular. I just wondered if you could sort of quantify what we should be thinking about in terms of the sort of quantum of strategic CapEx over the next couple of years? And just particularly what does that do to LATAM capacity or capability from here. So, that's sort of question number one. Number two, on Amenity. So thanks for the additional color you've provided today. Obviously, you kind of stand out here is sort of the margin structure looks very different compared to the rest of the group. I just sort of wondered, given the comments you've made about the performance of that business being a bit compressed, does 2023 sort of understates, the sort of margin potential of that business and perhaps just help us understand the kind of nature of the relationships and contracts you've got there just compared to other parts of the group? And just finally, in terms of the new product development, I just wondered, is there any element of sort of customer pull here that's driving that new product development? Or is it you're identifying needs that are unfulfilled by others at the moment? Or just a little bit more color on that one would be great.
Sean Coyle
executiveMaybe I'll let TJ handle the CapEx question, I'll come back then to the Amenity question.
T. Kelly
executiveSure. Yes. So in terms of CapEx for next year, we have a few, I suppose, reasonably scaled projects that would be happening. In the rough order of magnitude, we're looking at CapEx next year from December [indiscernible] around the EUR 30 million or so. Again, what we will see is another relatively large spend on our ERP rollout. So in the order of EUR 10 million or so of investment in our D 365 rollout cost across the businesses next year. And then we've got parts of EUR 3.5 million to EUR 5 million each across investment in remaining investment in our FoliQ plant, that would be closer to about EUR 3 million or so, given that we've invested some in that FoliQ plant already this year. That will increase capacity in FoliQ and centralize the manufacturer of FoliQ in our [ Alexandra ] facility in Poland. We are also investing about EUR 4 million in a new bottling facility in Timisoara in our Romanian business. And then across the CRF and physiology nutrition business in Brazil. We'll be investing to grow effectively our CRF capacity from about 45,000 tonnes today up to between 65,000 to 70,000 tonnes capacity, which you would see would give us growth for the next couple or 3 years or so in the CRF business. Again, go forward, the magnitude of spend an investment there will be between CRF and the physiology nutrition capacity investments in the order of again, EUR 4 million to EUR 5 million, we would say, next year. So there are the big-ticket items that are in train for CapEx spend for FY '24.
Sean Coyle
executiveKevin, just on the Amenity businesses, the PB Kent profitability and fall in profit was roughly EUR 1 million, maybe slightly more than EUR 1 million. So the absolute number is probably understated compared to a normal year because of the higher gas prices and slightly lower volume in PB Kent as a result. So yes, both the absolute margin and the percentage margin are understated as a result. I think some of the businesses that we've acquired are more seasonal and more profitable in the winter, certainly British Hardwood Trees, since we've acquired it, has been loss-making in this period because it doesn't make money in the summer, it makes money in the winter period when all of that tree planting activity happens, and it's carrying an overhead, obviously through the summer period but it's only in there for a few months. So, what I would expect to see is growth in sales, growth in absolute level of profitability from the newly acquired businesses when they are all in there on a full 12-month basis, and we expect to see both an uplift in percentage margin in this division and also the absolute level of profitability in this business over the course of the next 12 months as the businesses are all included on a full 12-month basis.
Kevin Fogarty
analystGreat. That's helpful.
Sean Coyle
executiveDid we miss one of your three questions? Or is there were...
Kevin Fogarty
analystYes, this is the final one. Just in terms of product development. You've -- obviously you've talked a lot about that today. And I just wonder, is there an element to sort of customer pull here, clearly, there's a sort of transition in terms of the space and where it's going to kind of more biologicals, et cetera. I just wondered, are you seeing a sort of customer pull here? Or is it you sort of identifying an unmet need, for example, that isn't being fulfilled by others? Just what the thinking is around that?
Sean Coyle
executiveYes. I think there is a greater interest in the possibilities of bioproducts and biocontrols than there has been in the past. It does vary by market. It's certainly, we've got a lot of different areas where biological products will work alongside synthetic chemistry to increase the efficacy of the synthetic crop protection products that are being used by farmers. So they will encourage the roots to grow deeper or go deeper. They will add to the efficacy of a standard product and perhaps allow a lower level of CP product to be applied. So we're getting things like wetters or things like adjuvants and foliar fertilizers, which can be made from natural products, but which assists the application of synthetic chemistry and allow a lower dose rate to be applied. So there's a combination of factors. The world of biological products or bioproducts is very complex. In some cases, it's not regulated. And in other cases, it's very heavily regulated depending on the product claims. So it's still, overall, though, Kevin, represents a very small proportion of farmer spend. It is, at an overall level still represents a low proportion of our sales and a low value in terms of farmer spend.
Operator
operatorThank you. Dear speakers, there are no further questions at this time. I would now like to hand the conference over to our speaker, Sean Coyle for any closing remarks.
Sean Coyle
executiveOkay. Thank you very much for joining us this morning. Hopefully, we will see some of you on the road shows. We're in London certainly and in the U.S. over the course of the next 1.5 weeks. So hopefully, we'll see you then and catch you either in person or virtually over the course of the next week. So thank you for joining the call this morning. Bye-bye.
Operator
operatorThat does conclude our conference for today. Thank you for participating. You may now all disconnect. Have a nice day.
This call discussed
For developers and AI pipelines
Programmatic access to Origin Enterprises plc earnings transcripts and 32,000+ others is available through the
EarningsCalls.dev REST API. Plans from $24.99/month — full transcripts, speaker segments,
full-text search, and the recently-added /api/v1/transcripts/recent polling endpoint for ETL pipelines.