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Home / Business

Steel & Tube says it struggled against bigger rivals in irrigation sector

By Jonathan Underhill
BusinessDesk·
9 Jul, 2018 11:58 PM5 mins to read

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The company has put its S&T Plastics business up for sale. Photo / File

The company has put its S&T Plastics business up for sale. Photo / File

Steel & Tube Holdings' new chief executive Mark Malpass says the company paid too much to enter the irrigation sector, struggled to compete against bigger rivals and ended up writing off its investment to return focus to its core steel business.

The company has put its S&T Plastics business up for sale. It paid almost $8 million cash for the plant, buying Aquaduct NZ out of receivership in 2015 and spent a further $4m to get the machinery, which includes three extruders to turn out the large bore HDPE (High-Density Polyethylene) irrigation pipe.

It won $27m of business in 2017 but "the reality is we've really struggled to make money out of it. The assumptions were pretty rosy," Malpass said.

He says S&T Plastics has about 10 per cent share of the irrigation segment, where its rivals include the Belgium-owned Marley and Fletcher Building's Iplex business, which also make narrow bore pipe used by municipal authorities.

Malpass says Steel & Tube would have had to invest $3-$4m to expand into narrow bore pipe "and then you've got to stand back and say, is this really for us."

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It is in talks with some of its rivals about the sale, he said.

Steel & Tube faced compounding problems with the plastic pipe business. Polymer and resin prices, derived from crude oil, have soared 42 per cent in the past 12 months while the kiwi dollar has weakened.

Added to that, HDPE pipe faces competition from fibreglass pipe that's manufactured offshore and imported and teething issues at the S&T Plastics plant resulted in higher than expected production scrap in 2017 that cut earnings before interest and tax by $2m last year.

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And the plant is currently on farmland at Hororata in Canterbury, on a short-term monthly lease, protected from the elements by what amounts to an industrial-strength tent. Lease costs for a new site had looked high.

At the same time, activity in the irrigation sector was slowing, with fewer dairy conversions, rising costs for consenting and compliance and the government's decision to end state funding for irrigation projects.

"Some people have a rosy view of the irrigation segment. We don't have the same level of confidence," Malpass said.

Exiting S&T Plastics is part of a wider cleanup following a review led by Malpass and the company's refreshed board.

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In a profit warning issued in May, Steel & Tube said it would take up to $54m in non-trading costs and impairments against its 2018 results, resulting in an ebit loss of about $38m in the year ended June 30 from positive ebit of $31.1m the previous year.

As a result, the Lower Hutt-based supplier of steel building products had to get a waiver from its lenders for a breach of its lending covenants.

Malpass was confirmed as CEO in February, having been interim chief since last September, when Dave Taylor departed.

The general managers of supply chain and distribution have also departed since the start of 2017 and a new chief financial officer and company secretary, Greg Smith, started at the end of last October.

Malpass was also appointed to the board, now chaired by Susan Paterson after John Anderson departed. Former chair Dean Pritchard retired in November after 12 years on the board and was replaced by professional director Steve Reindler.

In the company's shareholder newsletter last week, Malpass said his first eight months as CEO had been "challenging" and required some "tough decisions." The impact of "resolving legacy issues and resetting the company has been greater than expected," he said.

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The focus now was on Steel & Tube's core businesses of steel roofing, flooring systems, reinforcing steel and wire. The company "has a great footprint but had been letting itself down a bit," he said.

S&T Plastics is being advertised for sale with the price on application, according to an advertisement on Trade Me, which says it had revenue of $21m in the 2018 year and earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation of $2.7m.

While that suggests an earnings margin of almost 13 per cent, Malpass says the numbers are presented on a sale basis, excluding company overheads and amortisation, and for Steel & Tube the earnings generated were more like $500,000.

Malpass says Steel & Tube is "a peashooter" compared to Fletcher but he agrees there are some similarities between himself and Fletcher CEO Ross Taylor.

Taylor was installed after his predecessor was dumped over construction losses and has since announced a decentralised model, with a reduced head office function, and the sale of non-core assets.

That's a similar strategy to Steel & Tube, which has eliminated some executive positions during its restructuring over the past six to seven months. It was still integrating businesses acquired in the past four to five years which are part of its core, which as its Composite Floor Decks unit.

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The $54m in writedowns for the 2018 year comprised of $12m from selling S&T Plastics, $18m on inventory from its new enterprise resource planning (ERP) system, and $10 million on other intangibles. The company also took a $5.5m impairment on inventory in the first half. Steel & Tube is projecting a return to profit in 2019.

Its shares last traded at $1.52, and have fallen 37 per cent in the past 12 months while the S&P/NZX 50 Index gained 20 per cent.

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