What's New In W. Africa (Nigeria)
NEO - things have moved on a bit since the FS days....
Nigerian In Law
A liitle birdie tells me Shell have (sort of) kissed and made up with BHNL after a disastrous audit of Caverton. I guess they'll be in touch with the droves of laid off staff to get them back ? Also hearing that Caverton has some internal issues regarding salaries.
Not sure how the new "merged" parent company will view this new revenue stream, until now they appear to have been content to let BHNL die by attrition.
NEO
Not sure how the new "merged" parent company will view this new revenue stream, until now they appear to have been content to let BHNL die by attrition.
NEO
Also hearing that Caverton has some internal issues regarding salaries.
It appears the NAPIMS brown envelopes weren't enough to "clear up" the issues
Nigerian In Law
Last I heard all mineral concerns were 51% owned by NNPC, so wouldn't they have the final word on any change of contractors ?
NEO
NEO
Perhaps a moot point as Shell is planning to extricate themselves from the quagmire
https://stocks.apple.com/AsYg8pWeMSp-2DwKahpSvmw
“The company is looking to complete an exit process started in Nigeria more than a decade ago, by selling its remaining onshore and shallow-water assets”
https://stocks.apple.com/AsYg8pWeMSp-2DwKahpSvmw
“The company is looking to complete an exit process started in Nigeria more than a decade ago, by selling its remaining onshore and shallow-water assets”
A liitle birdie tells me Shell have (sort of) kissed and made up with BHNL after a disastrous audit of Caverton. I guess they'll be in touch with the droves of laid off staff to get them back ? Also hearing that Caverton has some internal issues regarding salaries.
Not sure how the new "merged" parent company will view this new revenue stream, until now they appear to have been content to let BHNL die by attrition.
NEO
Not sure how the new "merged" parent company will view this new revenue stream, until now they appear to have been content to let BHNL die by attrition.
NEO
Nigeria produces 1.4 million barrels of crude a day, but it refines little. It relies almost completely on fuel imports, making the local market vulnerable to disruptions.
Very limited Refinery capacity......tremendous crude oil supply....the Mind doth boggle!
What could possibly go wrong?
Then there is the wonderful Motorway that runs from Lagos to the National Capital in Abuja.....right?
Worst hit was its core business, Helicopter Services where it lost N5.8 billion.
by Blurb Team @NairametricsApril 11, 2022
in Blurb
Caverton Group classifies its business as Nigeria’s leading provider of marine, aviation and logistics services to local and international oil and gas companies in Nigeria. Intuitively, one can assume that the business performs well when oil and gas firms perform well and poorly when oil and gas firms struggle. However, recent results suggest otherwise.
The company recently released its 2021 FY results revealing it recorded a whopping loss after tax of N4.3 billion compared to a profit after tax of N1.1 billion in 2020 which ironically was a Covid-19 year. That year, the result was a 74% drop from the N4.3 billion profit reported in 2019 which was its best year yet. Well, 2021 has now seen things go from bad to worse with its worst result in at least 5 years. So, what happened?
According to the company, the loss was due to the impact of the “Covid-19 pandemic” and other factors which it claims had “negatively impacted business operations in Nigeria and the rest of the world” thus leading to the losses. As they say, the devil is in the details. A cursory review of the company’s financial statement reveals the losses were due to a spike in its cost of sales, the direct cost of doing business.
Read: Despite shutdown, Caverton rakes in N8billion in Helicopter and Aircraft revenues
More specifically, in 2021 consumables gulped N12.2 billion out of the N24 billion incurred in total cost of sales compared to 2020 with N6.4 billion and N18.5 billion, respectively. Consumables the company explains include aircraft spare parts, aviation fuels, freight and courier services protocol and immigrations etc. Another cost component that recorded a rise were foreign exchange losses and higher finance cost adding N8.5 billion to finance cost compared to just N6.3 billion a year earlier
Unfortunately, it could not pass on this cost to its customers most of whom may have locked in price by paying for service upfront. Revenues topped N34 billion just N2.6 billion higher than a year earlier. This was not enough to cushion the spike in expenses. The worst hit was its core business, Helicopter Services where it lost N5.8 billion.
Despite this challenge, Calverton still had a healthy cash pile of about N5.7 billion helped by a net loan increase of about N11 billion. Over 90% of the bank’s N31 billion loans were borrowed in foreign currency further posing a headwind for operational cost. If the exchange rate situation in the country gets worse this year or even remains as is, the company might take N4-5 billion hit on foreign currency losses. It will point to its revenue being charged in dollars but that is not enough. So, what can management do?
Read: Caverton reveals MRO and Simulator Training facility to open in Q2 2021
The solutions we see here are two-pronged. One is to immediately raise revenues to levels that can accommodate the rising cost of doing business. This will involve raising prices and increasing orders. It will have to hope that oil and gas companies use more of its helicopters at a higher cost than they ordinarily did. It might also need to look at other customers beyond the oil and gas sector. It is the election season and politicians will want to move from one destination to another as campaign picks up. However, the company seems to be looking in another direction. Here is what its CEO Mr, Bode Makaonjuola said:
“To further boost revenues, the Group has been exploring further opportunities within and outside the oil and gas sector. In addition to growing our market share in the oil and gas logistics sector, our primary focus for the year will be on third party training and maintenance. Our Maintenance Repair and Overhaul (MRO) facility and our Caverton Aviation Training Centre (CATC), both in Lagos, officially commenced business operation in the 2nd half of 2021. Prospects for training and maintenance is extremely positive as we are in advanced contract negotiations with a number of government and private institutions across sub–Saharan Africa.”
It will be interesting to see what these business segments add to revenues in the first quarter of this year. The second thing the company must do is raise capital. Currently, total debt of about N31 billion (without adding leases) is almost twice its total equity of N17.3 billion. Its free cash flow of N4.6 billion will not be enough, so sooner rather than later that loan will have to be repaid and it will have to come from fresh equity.
These are not easy actions, but it appears time is running out. If it does not take urgent action, the situation might not stop worsening.
https://nairametrics.com/2022/04/11/...-bad-to-worse/
Nigerian In Law
In partnership with ADA (they already operate in tandem with BHNL at Eket). Apparently they're sending crew to fill the void. It will be interesting to see how things are divvied up. BHNL have laid off almost all their pilots and engineers. I guess the Nationals will simply switch over (or back to the company that trained them) if Bristow get any business back.
NEO
NEO