Friday, March 29, 2024

A2 CEO and chair sell down holdings

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A2 Milk Co’s chief executive and chair have sold down their stakes in the milk marketing firm, less than a week after reporting first-half profit more than tripled as demand for its A2 Platinum infant formula surged in its key Australia, New Zealand and China businesses.
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Chair David Hearn sold 1 million shares for about $2.5 million, or $2.48 a share, on Friday, while chief executive Geoffrey Babidge sold 900,000 shares for $2.2m, or an average price of $2.49, yesterday. Hearn gained the shares by exercising 1m of his 5m options, for which he paid $630,000, with the sale to facilitate a property transaction in the UK to move his personal residence, according to documents published to the NZX.

Last week, the milk marketer reported net profit soared to $39.4 million in the six months ended December 31, 2016, from $10.1m in the year-earlier period, while revenue rose 84% to $256.1m.

The shares, which are notoriously volatile, had rallied to a record $2.60 in the lead-up to earnings being reported, slipped 1 cent to $2.57 after the results, and have continued to decline since. They traded at $2.51 on Friday, when Hearn sold his shares, $2.44 yesterday, and are down 4.1% to $2.34 today.

A2's shares have bounced around in the past quarter, dragged down from a then-record $2.58 in December when ASX-listed rival Bellamy's was put in a trading halt, causing investors concern that there might be sector-wide issues. It continued to struggle until mid-January when A2 quelled concerns about its earnings outlook and Bellamy's cut its profit forecast for the second time and announced its chief executive's exit. Bellamy's ran into trouble after China moved to tighten regulations in a bid to crack down on the grey market – or 'daigou' – sales and allay concerns about food safety.

In the first half, A2 posted strong growth from China, with revenue rising to $37.7m from $8.4m a year earlier, and operating earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation rising to $13.7m from $1.3m in 2016. The company says it has a considerable growth opportunity in China and is using multiple channels, including cross-border e-retailers, to sell into that market, while monitoring Chinese regulation of infant formula and cross-border trade.

© BusinessDesk

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