South Port New Zealand Limited logo

South Port NZ Ltd - 2024 Meeting Presentations

AGM17 October 2024SPNIndustrials

SOUTH PORT NZ LTD
2024 ANNUAL MEETING


Chair – Philip Cory-Wright


The year to 30 June 2024 was a difficult year operationally but a very important and

positive year strategically for South Port.

Cargo volumes were down by 7.7% overall, across all major cargo categories,

particularly forestry and agriculture. This reflected cargo volumes that were last seen

in 2020. The core bulk cargo volumes were down by 12.2% at 2.67M tonnes.

Normally we would expect South Port to benefit from its well-diversified cargo portfolio,

but this year the downturn was reflected across the board. The one bright spot was

the container business. Container volumes were up by 24.5% to 51,900 TEU, the

second highest on record.

As expected for a relatively fixed cost business, this fed through into a lower profit.

Normalised NPAT, excluding one-offs, was down by 13.4% (from $11.5M to $9.96M).

The Board therefore is pleased that we have maintained a steady dividend of 27.0

cents per share which represents a pay-out of 83% of free cash flow.

Strategically, the 2024 year was a very positive one for South Port. First, the Kia

Whakaū harbour channel deepening programme was completed successfully. The

draft was increased by a full metre to 9.7m chart datum – at a very modest cost of

$13M. We were very pleased to be able to declare formally the new draft on 4 October.

The practical consequences of this new depth are many. It enables deeper draft

vessels to enter Bluff Harbour. It enables fully loaded log ships to be able to depart,

allowing greater use of “one-port calls” that forestry companies love because they are

much lower cost. It enables visiting vessels to operate across a fuller range of tides.

It provides greater safety margins.

Secondly, our key customer, New Zealand Aluminium Smelters (NZAS), announced a

deal with several leading NZ electricity gentailers that will enable NZAS to operate for

at least another 20 years. This included a demand-response option that provides New

Zealand with a very significant cushion against electricity shortages caused by low

hydro lake levels. The benefits of this new demand-response option were shown

sooner than expected when Meridian Energy triggered it within four months of the

NZAS extension being announced.

As NZAS represents a third of our cargo base this announcement also plays an
important role in the commercial success of the Kia Whakaū project.

As previously advised, NZAS provides ~20% of South Port’s profit and also a long-

term stable earnings flow from its lease of the Tiwai wharf out to 2043. NZAS is also

a major contributor of activity and employment for the Southland region.

The NZAS decision is likely to provide flow on opportunities for the Port. Examples of

this include the commitment by gentailers to build new renewable electricity generation

in the Southland and Otago regions.

Immediately following on from the NZAS decision, Mercury NZ announced that it had

reached final investment decision to proceed with stage two of the Kaiwera Downs

wind farm. Stage two is much larger than stage one (32 turbines vs 10). Those

turbines and other equipment will come through South Port over the coming 12-18

months providing a valuable new cargo for the Port. Other prospective wind farms

which might be expected to come through the Port include Contact Energy’s

Slopedown wind farm (50 turbines), Manawa/Pioneer’s Kaihiku (up to 73 turbines),

and potentially Manawa’s Mahinerangi wind farm.

South Port is also hopeful that aquaculture projects will progress, including Ngāi Tahu’s

Hananui ocean salmon farm, Impact Marine’s land-based Salmon farm, Sanford’s land

based recirculating water hatchery and the Kelp Blue kelp farm.

This year we celebrate 30 years of being listed on the NZX. It is particularly pleasing

that these positive opportunities reaffirm the potential for our regional port that was

envisaged by local government and private investors when we listed in 1994.


CEO – Nigel Gear

I intend to expand further on our cargo flows in a little more detail, followed by

commentary on H&S, climate related disclosures, the community and staff.

South Port is primarily a bulk port, which represents 83% of our cargo base with the

balance containers 17%.

South Port’s cargo profile can be broken down further into three main sectors, 1/3

NZAS, 1/3 Forestry and 1/3 agricultural imports and exports.

As mentioned previously by the Chair bulk cargoes were down 12.2%. The main areas

impacted were agricultural input volumes that decreased by 15%, driven by a slow-

down predominantly in the red meat sector and also forestry which decreased by 26%.

Both woodchip and log volumes were down due to soft offshore demand in both the

Chinese and Japanese markets.

Containers volumes improved to levels similar to those we handled back in 2021 which

was pleasing. The main increases were shown in agricultural export volumes

increasing by 18% and manufactured export goods by 35%.

We are fortunate to have a long and successful commercial relationship with one of
the world’s leading shipping lines, Mediterranean Shipping Company, that provides a

weekly Wallaby service from Bluff to North Asia ports via Australia.

Health and Safety continues to be a key priority for South Port. We work in a complex

environment both on water and onshore, interacting daily with large vessels and

machinery in all weather conditions.

Our focus therefore is on critical risks, especially on people versus plant.

The port health and safety leadership group, made up of port companies, stevedores,

unions and regulators is working in partnership to develop better health and safety

outcomes across the industry.

A recent piece of work completed by the leadership group is the approved code of

practice for loading and unloading cargo on both ports and ships. This should help to

standardise processes and set consistent guidelines for the industry to follow,

improving safety outcomes.

South Port is a Climate Reporting Entity (CRE) under the new Aotearoa New Zealand

Climate Standards which came into effect on 1 January 2023.

The new climate standards provide a consistent framework for entities to consider the

climate-related risks and opportunities that climate change presents for their activities

over the short, medium and long term. The climate-related disclosures cover four

pillars being, governance, strategy, risk management, and metrics & targets.

The Company’s first mandatory reporting period under these new standards is for the

year ended 30 June 2024. Our first report will be completed and published by 30

October 2024.

The Community that we work in is an important stakeholder of the Port and where

40% of our staff call home.

It is important therefore that we are active in the community whether through

sponsorships, attending community board meetings, working with iwi or simply

employees spending a day working in the Bluff surrounds.

Finally, we have an incredibly hard-working team at the Port and its only through their

efforts that the Port manages to operate at a high level required to safely handle our

regions export and import cargoes.


Outlook – Chair resumes

Offshore commodity markets especially the agricultural and forestry-based sectors,

continue to face particularly challenging conditions which are expected to be

reflected in the volumes of bulk cargo being handled through the Port.

Supply chains also continue to be disrupted, particularly around regions where

conflict is present.

However strategic opportunities provide South Port with reasons to be optimistic
about the future.

The NZAS 20-year extension provides consistency in vessel calls and base cargo

that can now be factored into future planning. This decision will result in flow on

opportunities like wind farm project cargoes that are expected to be handled through

the Port in the coming years.

The government recently announced 149 projects selected for inclusion in the Fast-

Track Approvals Bill. This list noted several aquaculture projects, three of which are

in Murihiku including, the Hananui ocean Salmon Farm, the Impact Marine’s land-

based Salmon Farm and the Sanford’s land-based recirculating water hatchery.

These opportunities and the diversity of cargoes handled through the port provide us

with optimism and resilience for the future of the Port.

Based on all known factors at this time, South Port estimates that FY25 earnings will

be in the range of $9.3M to $10.3M. On the assumption of a consistent earnings

profile and in the absence of any unforeseen circumstances, the Directors will seek

to, at least, maintain the current level of dividend payment.

---

Annual Meeting of Shareholders
17 October 2024

Chair Delivery

Board of Directors

Leadership Team

Cargo Volumes decreased by 7.7%
For the year ended 30 June 2024

3,269

3,454

3,554

3,479

3,213

-

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500

3,000

3,500

4,000

20202021202220232024

THOUSANDS

Container Volumes increased by 24.5%
For the year ended 30 June 2024

47,500

53,750

44,000

41,700

51,900

0

10,000

20,000

30,000

40,000

50,000

60,000

20202021202220232024

TEU

Normalised Net Profit after Tax decreased by 13.4%
For the year ended 30 June 2024

$9.45

$10.45

$11.16

$11.50

$9.96

$-

$2.00

$4.00

$6.00

$8.00

$10.00

$12.00

$14.00

20202021202220232024

Millions


Dividend

For the year ended 30 June 2024

79%

63%

73%

59%

83%

$0.25

$0.26

$0.27

$0.28

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

20202021202220232024

CPS

% of free cash flowcps

Declared Draft of 10.7m at High Tide
Declared draft of 9.7m Chart Datum

or 10.7m High Tide.

NZAS 20 Year Extension

Kaiwera Downs Stage 2

Fast Track Consents – Hananui Aquaculture Farm

30 Years
Listed on NZX

CEO Delivery

Cargo Profile
For the year ended 30 June 2024

Bulk

83%

Containers

17%

Cargo Profile
For the year ended 30 June 2024

NZAS

36%

Forestry

28%

Agricultural

36%

•CEO Delivery
8,000

10,600

10,700

10,200

12,000

0

2,000

4,000

6,000

8,000

10,000

12,000

14,000

20202021202220232024

Agricultural Export Volumes increased by 18%

3,100

2,600

3,000

3,300

4,500

0

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

20202021202220232024

Manufactured Export Goods increased by 35%

•CEO Delivery
Mediterranean

Shipping Company

Health & Safety

Approved Code of Practice

QUESTIONS?
Climate Related Disclosures

Community

Staff

QUESTIONS?
Outlook

QUESTIONS?
Questions

Data sourced from publicly available filings. Our datasets may not be complete. Automated analysis can produce errors. If you believe any data on this page is incorrect, please contact us at hello@nzxplorer.co.nz. For informational purposes only. Not investment advice.

Other issuers discussed similar conditions around this time

Matched by meaning across NZX announcement text, not keywords — based on our semantic index of announcement bodies.