Chief financial officer Simon Bosley said the firm's dividend policy was unchanged, so the board could potentially declare a payment of up to 50 per cent of after-tax profits if it's considered fiscally appropriate.
See more from Rakon's latest financial results here:
"Obviously that's not a position we're in at the end of the first half," Bosley said. "That will obviously be considered by the board at the end of the full year financial 15, but I think a key point of that policy is 'considered fiscally appropriate', so it's a little bit of a wait and see."
Rakon narrowed its net loss to $3.4 million, or 1.7 cents per share, in the six month period from $45.7 million, or 22.3 cents, a year earlier. Revenue fell 24 per cent to $61.4 million.
The company has been exiting the smart wireless device market, which didn't deliver big enough margins, to focus on the burgeoning telecommunications sector, and has shifted manufacturing from the UK and France to New Zealand and India as part of restructuring to reduce its global workforce by 45 per cent and slash its operating costs.
The company's New Zealand unit narrowed its underlying Ebitda loss to $920,000 in the half from $4.5 million a year earlier, while revenue shrank 40 per cent to $23.2 million. The UK division reported a 38 per cent drop in earnings to $1.6 million on a 24 per cent decline in sales, while the French segment narrowed its Ebitda loss to $32,000 from $5.6 million on flat revenue of $28.2 million.
Rakon has been focused on reducing its bank borrowings as part of its restructure, and had net debt of $8.2 million as at September 30, down from $27.1 million a year earlier. Its operations generated a cash outflow of $30,000 in the half, compared to an inflow of $7.8 million a year earlier, and it had cash and equivalents of $3.9 million at the balance date.