logo
Wilmar H1 profit rises 2.6% on improved plantation, sugar milling and food product segments

Wilmar H1 profit rises 2.6% on improved plantation, sugar milling and food product segments

Business Times5 days ago
[SINGAPORE] Agribusiness Wilmar Internationa l on Tuesday (Aug 12) reported a net profit of US$594.9 million for the first half ended Jun 30, up 2.6 per cent from US$579.6 million in the year-ago period.
This was attributed to stronger performances in its plantation and sugar milling, which rose on the back of higher palm oil prices and fresh fruit bunch production. Wilmar's food product segments also turned in a strong performance, due to improved sales in the flour and rice businesses in China.
Contributions from the company's associations and joint ventures also more than doubled in H1, compared to a year ago. This was especially due to the group's investments in Asia.
However, these improvements were partially offset by lower contributions from the feed and industrial products segment, said Wilmar.
Revenue was also up 6.3 per cent to US$32.9 billion, from US$30.9 billion, for the first half of the financial year on the back of higher revenue across most of the group's business divisions.
Earnings per share was US$0.095 for the six months, up from US$0.093.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
The group declared an interim dividend of S$0.04 per share, a drop from S$0.06 per share. The dividend will be paid on Aug 28.
Kuok Khoon Hong, CEO of Wilmar said that the group's first half results have improved despite 'difficult operating conditions'.
'Refining margins for the tropical oils business are expected to remain challenged, while the plantations business should be favourable for the rest of the year. Our crushing operations are expected to remain stable,' said Kuok.
He added that Wilmar's full-year results will depend on the resolution of various issues relating to its operations in Indonesia.
In June, the company was embroiled in Indonesian court proceedings involving a palm-oil graft case . In July, Indonesian authorities launched a probe into major rice producers , including Wilmar's unit, over alleged mislabelling practices.
Said Kuok: 'Barring unforeseen circumstances, we are cautiously optimistic that the performance of our core segments will be satisfactory.'
Shares of Wilmar closed flat at S$2.97 on Tuesday, before the announcement.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Intel CEO's ‘Amazing Story' has helped make him a billionaire
Intel CEO's ‘Amazing Story' has helped make him a billionaire

Business Times

time2 hours ago

  • Business Times

Intel CEO's ‘Amazing Story' has helped make him a billionaire

[NEW YORK] Days after calling for the firing of Intel Corp's CEO, President Donald Trump changed his mind following a 'very interesting' meeting with the executive. 'His success and rise is an amazing story,' Trump wrote in a Truth Social post on Monday (Aug 11). It's a story that's also made Lip-Bu Tan amazingly rich. The 65-year-old technology and venture capital industry veteran has amassed a fortune worth at least US$1.1 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, which is calculating Tan's net worth for the first time. The bulk of his fortune stems from Cadence Design Systems, a maker of chip design tools where Tan was chief executive officer for 12 years before joining Intel. He has sold shares worth more than US$575 million in the San Jose, California-based company, and still holds a US$500 million position, according to Bloomberg's calculations. A Bloomberg report late Thursday (Aug 14) afternoon saying the Trump administration is in talks with Intel to have the US government potentially take a stake in the Silicon Valley chipmaker sent the company's shares up 7.4 per cent in New York. The stock gained 15 per cent since Tan's appointment as CEO in March, boosting the value of his stake to more than US$29 million. It was Tan's tenure at Cadence, along with his other role as executive chairman of venture firm Walden International, that initially drew criticism from Washington. Trump ally and Republican Senator Tom Cotton sent a letter to Intel's board chair earlier this month questioning Tan's ties to China and his history at Cadence, which sold products to a Chinese military university. A day later, the president posted that Tan was 'highly CONFLICTED and must resign, immediately.' BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Tan called the claims 'misinformation' in a letter to employees. But his record of investing in China and the riches it has brought him had already cast a shadow over his work. In July, Cadence pleaded guilty to violating US export controls during Tan's tenure and took a US$140.6 million charge related to settling the cases. Earlier, in 2023, the US government had sent Tan a letter asking Walden to explain its investments after the San Francisco-based firm had invested in more than 100 Chinese companies. 'I want to be absolutely clear: Over 40+ years in the industry, I've built relationships around the world and across our diverse ecosystem – and I have always operated within the highest legal and ethical standards,' Tan wrote in response to the allegations. A spokesperson for Santa Clara, California-based Intel declined to comment. A naturalised US citizen, Tan was born in Malaysia in 1959, the youngest of five children. His father was editor-in-chief of a Malaysian newspaper, while his mother was a professor in Singapore. After graduating with a degree in physics from Nanyang Technical University, he earned a Masters in nuclear engineering from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and an MBA from the University of San Francisco. His move to Silicon Valley brought him into the venture capital world. He met the founding partner of Walden Capital and proposed raising an international fund for them, offering to do so without being paid a salary, according to an oral history of his life from a 2018 interview at the Computer History Museum. The first fund of US$3.3 million was partially seeded with the help of his father-in-law and his father's friends in Malaysia. Tan's technical background led him to concentrate on semiconductors at a time when it was seen as a 'sunset' industry. His investors questioned the strategy, wondering why he would invest in an area US firms had largely abandoned, he said in the 2018 interview. 'Now they're starting to recognise my strategy worked.' Walden International went on to invest US$5 billion in more than 600 companies across 12 countries, many of them niche semiconductor firms. For a decade and a half, he served on the board of Semiconductor Manufacturing International, now China's leading chipmaker. Since joining Intel as CEO in March, Tan has accelerated his divestments in Chinese technology companies. But he remains executive chairman of Walden International and also invests through Walden Catalyst Ventures, a venture arm focused on startups in the US, Europe and Israel. Through Sakarya, a Hong Kong-based firm wholly owned by Tan, and various Walden International entities, he has invested in at least 165 Chinese firms and startups, according to Chinese company data provider Qichacha. Bloomberg's estimate of Tan's fortune doesn't include Walden International as his personal involvement in the group's entities isn't disclosed. During his time as Cadence's CEO from 2009 to 2021, the stock increased more than 4,000 per cent. Tan sold in excess of US$575 million of shares through the end of 2023, when he last reported sales. His disclosed ownership at the time of 1.5 million shares, or around 0.53 per cent of the company, is worth about US$500 million today. While running Cadence, he also kept his full-time position at Walden, acknowledging in the 2018 interview that he was someone who only needed four or five hours of sleep a night. He saw the roles as synergistic, with the tech investments helping to inform Cadence's direction at the time. 'I think it kind of goes hand in hand, helping the industry, and also, it's good for me for education,' he said. 'I never stop learning.' Tan stepped down as Cadence's CEO in 2021, taking on the role of executive chairman for next two years. He also joined Intel's board, though left in August 2024 after disagreements over the company's strategy and direction, according to published reports. He was named CEO in March, charged with reviving the chipmaker, which has struggled recently as computing migrated to smartphones and AI grew in importance. Tan, who has since rejoined Intel's board, owns roughly 1.2 million shares of Intel, with about 99 per cent acquired after agreeing to become CEO, according to an offer letter from Intel. His pay package includes a salary of US$1 million, plus a 200 per cent performance-based bonus and US$66 million in long-term equity awards and stock options, the company said in a filing. 'The United States has been my home for more than 40 years,' Tan wrote in the letter to employees following Trump's call for his resignation. 'I love this country and am profoundly grateful for the opportunities it has given me.' BLOOMBERG

ESG loan market now less marred by greenwashing: UK FCA
ESG loan market now less marred by greenwashing: UK FCA

Business Times

time3 hours ago

  • Business Times

ESG loan market now less marred by greenwashing: UK FCA

TWO years after it warned of greenwashing risks in the market for sustainability-linked loans (SLLs), the UK's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) says banks and borrowers appear to have made meaningful improvements. Sacha Sadan, the FCA's director of environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues, said in a letter posted on the FCA's website that, since its 2023 critique, the SLL market has developed 'better practice and more robust product structures'. He cited more appropriate targets and more clearly defined roles for the banks structuring such deals as examples of improvements. Issuance of SLLs peaked in 2021 before sliding amid accusations of greenwashing and as interest in ESG strategies declined. Still, with close to US$2 trillion of issuance to date, SLLs continue to represent the second-biggest product category of sustainable debt after green bonds, according to data compiled by BloombergNEF. SLLs are supposed to create incentives for corporate borrowers to reach ESG goals, such as cutting greenhouse gas emissions. Typically, a borrower is rewarded with lower interest costs if it reaches a stated target. Noting that it does not directly oversee SLLs, the FCA said in 2023 it had concerns about the integrity of the market. The regulator called out potential conflicts of interest, a lack of trust and integrity and the low ambition and poor design of some SLLs' key performance indicators. A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 12.30 pm ESG Insights An exclusive weekly report on the latest environmental, social and governance issues. Sign Up Sign Up In his letter dated Aug 14, Sadan said the market 'has shifted from numerous, disjointed' sustainability performance targets to two or three targets that are 'material and strategically significant'. Meanwhile, the KPIs that determine a borrower's performance against its target 'are now generally of greater relevance', he said. Sadan added that borrowers are also removing SLL labels from existing loans if they breach the terms, or if a loan no longer meets a bank's criteria. 'There are still barriers to scaling the SLL market and concerns about incentives, but the improvements we observed are important steps in the development of a credible transition finance ecosystem,' he said. 'Raising standards can help establish SLLs as a viable instrument to support borrowers' sustainability objectives, even if it may reduce volumes in the near term by filtering out poorly structured SLLs.' Sadan also said he was aware some banks had 'declined to support clients in structuring SLLs' when proposed targets seem 'unambitious or immaterial to a borrower's business model'. He encouraged banks to 'remain alert to potential conflicts of interest' given the 'potential for client relationships to disproportionately drive a bank's decision to provide an SLL to a client'. BLOOMBERG

EU push to protect digital rules holds up trade statement with US, FT reports
EU push to protect digital rules holds up trade statement with US, FT reports

CNA

time5 hours ago

  • CNA

EU push to protect digital rules holds up trade statement with US, FT reports

The European Union is trying to prevent the United States from targeting the bloc's digital rules as both sides work through the final details of a delayed statement to formalise a trade deal reached last month, the Financial Times reported on Sunday. EU officials said disagreements over language relating to "non-tariff barriers", which the U.S. said include the digital rules, are among the reasons for the hold-up of the statement, the newspaper said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store