Groupe SEB: 2022 Half-Year Sales and Results
Groupe SEB reported a resilient first half of 2022, with sales reaching €3,666m, up 1.6% year-on-year, despite a challenging economic environment characterized by rising inflation and the Ukraine conflict. The second quarter saw sales decline to €1,750m, down 0.4%, with a significant drop in the Consumer business, particularly in EMEA. Operating Result from Activity (ORFA) fell to €199m, reflecting a drop in profitability. The company anticipates stable sales and an operating margin target of 8% to 8.5% for the year while addressing supply chain tensions through inventory management.
- Sales growth of 1.6% year-on-year in first half 2022.
- Strong performance in the Professional business, with 9.5% organic growth.
- Solid sales momentum in China, with estimated revenue exceeding €2bn for 2022.
- Recovery in linen care and small domestic appliances, particularly in North America.
- Second quarter sales down 0.4% and 5.1% LFL.
- Operating Result from Activity decreased by €121m compared to 2021.
- Net financial debt increased by €597m from June 2021 to €2,447m.
- Consumer business revenue fell 3.3% in first half due to economic pressures.
Resilient Business Activity Following a Record Year
Profitability Temporarily Impacted in the Second Quarter
-
First-half sales:
€3,666m ; +1.6% , -2.3% LFL*-
Second quarter sales:
€1,750m ; -0.4% , -5.1% LFL*
-
Second quarter sales:
-
First-half Operating Result from Activity (ORFA):
€199m , -€121m vs 2021-
Second quarter ORFA:
€59m ; -€63m vs 2021
-
Second quarter ORFA:
-
Profit attributable to owners of the parent:
€72m , -€79m vs 2021 -
Net financial debt at
June 30, 2022 :€2,447m , up€597m vsJune 30, 2021 (inventory building to address supply chain tensions) -
Full-year assumptions revised:
- Overall stable 2022 sales vs 2021
-
Operating margin from activity in the range of
8% to8.5%
* LFL: like-for-like (at constant exchange rates and scope) – Changes vs 2021
Statement by
“2022 started in a favorable environment, which deteriorated in the second quarter, with the war ongoing in
Sales were resilient, driven by an excellent performance in
We keep on fueling our growth pillars:
We do not expect any significant improvement in the economic situation before year-end in mature countries. This leads us to target for the full year overall stable sales and an operating margin in the range of
I know I can count on the commitment and agility of our teams throughout the world to pursue our strategy of profitable growth.”
GENERAL COMMENTS ON GROUP SALES
After a solid first quarter, the second quarter was characterized by a deterioration in the general environment, with the worsening economic consequences of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict, ongoing supply chain tensions and the return of inflation. This fueled consumers’ concerns about their purchasing power and impacted demand, with tradeoffs of spending to services and leisure, having an adverse impact on small domestic equipment –mainly the cooking categories– which had benefited strongly from the stay-at-home requirements in 2020 and 2021. It is positive, however, for the hospitality and catering sector.
In this context,
As was the case in the first quarter, organic growth was penalized by specific factors:
-
the war in
Ukraine : -1.6 pts in the first half and -2 pts in the second quarter; - the non-recurrence of 2021 loyalty programs: -1.4 pts in the first half and -0.6 pt in the second quarter;
-
the lockdowns in
China in the second quarter: -1.1 pts in the first half and -2.2 pts in the second quarter.
Combined, these factors –concentrated mainly in the Consumer business– translated into a growth shortfall of 4.1 pts in the first half and 4.8 pts in the second quarter. Excluding these items, sales would have risen by
Moreover, compared with 2019, the last “normal” year pre-COVID, our half-year sales increased by
The Consumer business revenue fell
Compared with 2019, first-half revenue are up
The Professional business, with
REVENUE BY REGION – 1st HALF-YEAR
Sales (€m) |
H1
|
H1
|
Change 2022/2021 |
|
Q2 2022
|
||
As
|
LFL* |
|
|||||
EMEA |
1,662 |
1,494 |
- |
- |
|
- |
|
|
1,171 |
1,072 |
- |
- |
- |
||
Other countries |
490 |
422 |
- |
- |
- |
||
|
480 |
515 |
+ |
- |
|
+ |
|
|
348 |
358 |
+ |
- |
- |
||
|
132 |
157 |
+ |
+ |
+ |
||
|
1,178 |
1,327 |
+ |
+ |
|
+ |
|
|
898 |
1,054 |
+ |
+ |
+ |
||
Other countries |
280 |
273 |
- |
- |
- |
||
TOTAL Consumer |
3,319 |
3,336 |
+ |
- |
|
- |
|
Professional |
290 |
330 |
+ |
+ |
|
+ |
|
|
3,610 |
3,666 |
+ |
- |
|
- |
|
*Like-for-like: at constant exchange rates and scope of consolidation |
Rounded figures in €m |
% calculated in non-rounded figures
|
COMMENTS ON CONSUMER BUSINESS BY REGION
Sales (€m) |
H1 2021 |
H1 2022 |
Change
|
|
Q2 2022
|
|||||
Reported |
LFL |
|
||||||||
EMEA |
1,662 |
|
1,494 |
|
- |
|
- |
|
- |
|
|
1,171 |
|
1,072 |
|
- |
|
- |
- |
||
Other countries |
490 |
|
422 |
|
- |
|
- |
- |
In
In this environment, the most popular products during the lockdown (food preparation, for instance) leveled off while cookware, floor care and linen care enjoyed positive momentum.
In
In
In other European countries, performances varied by market, with
OTHER EMEA COUNTRIES
After years of strong, uninterrupted organic growth, our sales in the region slackened in the first half of the year due to the impacts of the war in
Against this backdrop, momentum in the small domestic equipment market has slowed since March/April, with more promotional activity. The product categories that remained promising were robot vacuum cleaners, automatic espresso machines and “oil-less” fryers. We also continued our successful rollout of the
Beyond the issues in
In
Sales (€m) |
H1 2021 |
H1 2022 |
Change
|
|
Q2 2022 LFL |
|||||
Reported |
LFL |
|
||||||||
|
480 |
515 |
+ |
- |
|
+ |
||||
|
348 |
358 |
+ |
- |
- |
|||||
|
132 |
157 |
+ |
+ |
+ |
In
This base of comparison is particularly demanding in the
In
In
Like-for-like sales were up
In
In
Sales (€m) |
H1 2021 |
H1 2022 |
Change
|
|
Q2 2022
|
|||||
Reported |
LFL |
|
||||||||
|
1,178 |
1,327 |
+ |
+ |
|
+ |
||||
|
898 |
1,054 |
+ |
+ |
+ |
|||||
Other countries |
280 |
273 |
- |
- |
- |
In
At
This strong sales momentum was driven by small electrical appliances, including kitchen electrics (oil-less fryers, rice cookers, etc.) as well as food preparation (broad range of blenders), and large kitchen appliances (LKA). Sales of cookware, conversely, were down, despite very solid performances for woks and pans.
The good dynamic also enabled
OTHER ASIAN COUNTRIES
In
In
In
In
In other South-East Asian countries (
COMMENTS ON PROFESSIONAL BUSINESS ACTIVITY
Sales (€m) |
H1 2021 |
H1 2022 |
Change
|
|
Q2 2022
|
|||||
Reported |
LFL |
|
||||||||
Professional |
290 |
330 |
+ |
+ |
|
+ |
In the first half of 2022, revenue from the Professional business (professional coffee, hotel equipment and Krampouz) amounted to
In Professional Coffee, which accounts for
Excluding major contracts, organic growth in core business over the first six months was around
-
Europe , with growth of around20% LFL; -
North America , on the back of continued extension of the customer portfolio, almost doubling WMF/Schaerer sales and an excellent performance fromWilbur Curtis where sales enjoyed growth of more than50% .
Furthermore, in
The
Krampouz have been progressing by close to
OPERATING RESULT FROM ACTIVITY (ORFA)
Operating Result from Activity (ORFA) in first-half 2022 was
Like-for-like, ORFA in first-half 2022 was therefore
-
a negative volume effect of
€149m , reflecting the Consumer business slowdown which amplified in the second quarter; -
a significant price-mix effect (+
€366m ), fueled by the embedded effect of the price increases implemented by the Group inOctober 2021 , as well as the increases applied in early March; -
an increase in the cost of sales to -
€189m , including, in particular:- significant headwinds (raw materials, components, freight, storage, etc.), further inflated by the appreciation of the dollar and the Chinese yuan, in particular in the second quarter;
- the negative effect of the contraction in sales volumes on the workload of our plants and therefore on the absorption of fixed costs, compared with a very strong over-absorption in 2021;
-
a
€61m increase in growth drivers (innovation, advertising, marketing, etc.), with the strong investment policy introduced at the beginning of the year being curtailed at the end of the period; -
a
€45m increase in sales and administrative expenses, including the continued strengthening of sales resources and long-term investments (IT, offline and online D2C, etc.).
We also highlight, as usual, that given the seasonal nature of the Group's business, first-half ORFA is not representative of the full year.
OPERATING PROFIT AND NET PROFIT
At
At -
In these circumstances, profit attributable to owners of the parent totaled
FINANCIAL STRUCTURE AT
Consolidated shareholders’ equity stood at
At the same date, the Group's net financial debt was
At
- the policy of high inventories implemented by the Group in response to persistent supply chain issues;
- the increase in value related to higher prices for raw materials, components and freight;
- the increase in transport times for our finished products (inventories in transit).
Based on net financial debt of
The Group continues to benefit from a stable financial base, underpinned by a healthy and well-balanced financing structure in terms of instruments and maturity, and free of financial covenants.
OUTLOOK
After a solid first quarter, the Group had made the assumption of a gradually improving economic situation for the rest of the year but the climate worsened in the second quarter (war in
The Group now expects this environment to persist in the second half of the year.
Under these conditions, the Group is revising its previously announced growth assumptions for 2022 sales and Operating Result from Activity and is now targeting:
- Stable 2022 sales overall vs 2021
-
An ORFA margin in the range of
8% to8.5% for the full year.
These new assumptions factor in additional costs (raw materials, components, freight, currencies) now estimated at
In response to the current economic environment, the Group has rapidly taken the necessary actions in terms of prices and strict control of its operating costs, including the adaptation of growth drivers to present market conditions. Furthermore, it also kick-started a plan to gradually adjust its inventories to expected second-half levels of activity.
CONSOLIDATED INCOME STATEMENT
(€ million) |
6 months |
6 months |
12 months |
Revenue |
3.665.6 |
3,609.6 |
8,058.8 |
Operating expenses |
(3,467.0) |
(3,289.6) |
(7,245.5) |
OPERATING RESULT FROM ACTIVITY |
198.6 |
320.0 |
813.3 |
Statutory and discretionary employee profit-sharing |
(13.3) |
(15.7) |
(39.4) |
RECURRING OPERATING PROFIT |
185.3 |
304.3 |
773.9 |
Other operating income and expense |
(6.6) |
(46.3) |
(59.1) |
OPERATING PROFIT |
178.7 |
258.0 |
714.8 |
Finance costs |
(19.0) |
(21.6) |
(43.1) |
Other financial income and expense |
(27.9) |
(5.7) |
(21.4) |
PROFIT BEFORE TAX |
131.8 |
230.7 |
650.3 |
Income tax expense |
(30.7) |
(53.0) |
(142.7) |
PROFIT FOR THE PERIOD |
101.1 |
177.7 |
507.6 |
Non-controlling interests |
(29.5) |
(27.2) |
(53.8) |
PROFIT ATTRIBUTABLE TO OWNERS OF THE PARENT |
71.6 |
150.5 |
453.8 |
PROFIT ATTRIBUTABLE TO OWNERS OF THE PARENT PER SHARE (in units) |
|||
Basic earnings per share |
1.30 |
2.79 |
8.42 |
Diluted earnings per share |
1.29 |
2.78 |
8.36 |
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
ASSETS (in € millions) |
|
|
|
|
1,739.0 |
1,671.6 |
1,707.8 |
Other intangible assets |
1,311.6 |
1,272.7 |
1,289.9 |
Property, plant and equipment |
1,319.9 |
1,201.4 |
1,265.6 |
Other investments |
194.3 |
120.7 |
162.0 |
Other non-current financial assets |
16.3 |
15.9 |
16.3 |
Deferred tax liabilities |
157.4 |
120.3 |
129.8 |
Other non-current assets |
61.7 |
54.7 |
52.9 |
Long-term derivative instruments - assets |
35.0 |
20.1 |
11.6 |
NON-CURRENT ASSETS |
4,835.2 |
4,477.4 |
4,635.9 |
Inventories |
2,240.3 |
1,455.3 |
1,839.6 |
Customers |
761.2 |
785.9 |
934.6 |
Other receivables |
246.2 |
188.0 |
232.4 |
Current tax assets |
51.5 |
44.9 |
38.9 |
Short-term derivative instruments - assets |
191.3 |
64.7 |
115.7 |
Other investments and other financial assets |
272.2 |
686.0 |
60.6 |
Cash and cash equivalents |
1,392.6 |
1,437.7 |
2,266.5 |
CURRENT ASSETS |
5,155.3 |
4,662.5 |
5,488.3 |
TOTAL ASSETS |
9,990.5 |
9,139.9 |
10,124.2 |
EQUITY & LIABILITIES (in € millions) |
|
|
|
Share capital |
55.3 |
55.3 |
55.3 |
Reserves and retained earnings |
3,085.9 |
2,523.6 |
2,969.1 |
|
(33.3) |
(30.5) |
(34.3) |
Equity attributable to owners of the parent |
3,107.9 |
2,548.4 |
2,990.1 |
Non-controlling interests |
298.2 |
268.0 |
300.6 |
CONSOLIDATED SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY |
3,406.1 |
2,816.4 |
3,290.7 |
Deferred tax liabilities |
254.2 |
176.1 |
234.0 |
Employee benefits and other long-term provisions |
226.8 |
328.1 |
298.9 |
Long-term borrowings |
2,207.7 |
2,352.8 |
2,230.8 |
Other non-current liabilities |
51.5 |
56.2 |
54.1 |
Long-term derivative instruments - liabilities |
31.6 |
9.4 |
15.3 |
NON-CURRENT LIABILITIES |
2,771.8 |
2,922.6 |
2,833.1 |
Employee benefits and other short-term provisions |
121.5 |
135.7 |
132.0 |
Suppliers |
1,214.2 |
1,161.4 |
1,614.7 |
Other current liabilities |
455.4 |
389.0 |
546.7 |
Current tax liabilities |
55.4 |
51.2 |
51.8 |
Short-term derivative instruments - liabilities |
72.7 |
48.8 |
50.0 |
Short-term borrowings |
1,893.4 |
1,614.8 |
1,605.2 |
CURRENT LIABILITIES |
3,812.6 |
3,400.9 |
4,000.4 |
TOTAL CONSOLIDATED EQUITY AND LIABILITIES |
9,990.5 |
9,139.9 |
10,124.2 |
APPENDIX
REVENUE BY REGION – 1ST QUARTER
Sales (€m) |
Q1 2021 |
Q1 2022 |
Change 2022/2021 |
|
As
|
LFL* |
|||
EMEA |
870 |
813 |
- |
- |
|
599 |
582 |
- |
- |
Other countries |
271 |
231 |
- |
- |
|
243 |
243 |
+ |
- |
|
178 |
173 |
- |
- |
|
65 |
70 |
+ |
+ |
|
609 |
703 |
+ |
+ |
|
468 |
569 |
+ |
+ |
Other countries |
142 |
134 |
- |
- |
TOTAL Consumer |
1,722 |
1,760 |
+ |
- |
Professional |
130 |
156 |
+ |
+ |
|
1,852 |
1,915 |
+ |
+ |
*Like-for-like: at constant exchange rates and scope of consolidation |
Rounded figures in €m |
REVENUE BY REGION – 2ND QUARTER
Sales (€m) |
Q2 2021 |
Q2 2022 |
Change 2022/2021 |
|
As
|
LFL* |
|||
EMEA |
791 |
680 |
- |
- |
|
572 |
490 |
- |
- |
Other countries |
219 |
190 |
- |
- |
|
237 |
271 |
+ |
+ |
|
170 |
185 |
+ |
- |
|
67 |
87 |
+ |
+ |
|
568 |
624 |
+ |
+ |
|
430 |
485 |
+ |
+ |
Other countries |
138 |
139 |
+ |
- |
TOTAL Consumer |
1,597 |
1,576 |
- |
- |
Professional |
161 |
174 |
+ |
+ |
|
1,758 |
1,750 |
- |
- |
*Like-for-like: at constant exchange rates and scope of consolidation |
Rounded figures in €m |
GLOSSARY
On a like-for-like basis (LFL) – Organic
The amounts and growth rates at constant exchange rates and consolidation scope in a given year compared with the previous year are calculated:
- using the average exchange rates of the previous year for the period in consideration (year, half-year, quarter)
- on the basis of the scope of consolidation of the previous year.
This calculation is made primarily for sales and Operating Result from Activity.
Operating Result from Activity (ORFA)
Operating Result from Activity (ORFA) is Groupe SEB’s main performance indicator. It corresponds to sales minus operating expenses, i.e. the cost of sales, innovation expenditure (R&D, strategic marketing and design), advertising, operational marketing as well as sales and marketing expenses. ORFA does not include discretionary and non-discretionary profit-sharing or other non-recurring operating income and expense.
Adjusted EBITDA
Adjusted EBITDA is equal to Operating Result from Activity minus discretionary and non-discretionary profit-sharing, to which are added operating depreciation and amortization.
Free cash flow
Free cash flow corresponds to the “net cash from operating activities/net cash used by operating activities” item in the consolidated cash flow table, adjusted from non-recurring transactions with an impact on the Group’s net debt (for example, cash outflows related to restructuring) and after taking account of recurring investments (CAPEX).
SDA
Small Domestic Appliances. Kitchen Electrics, Home and Personal Care.
Net financial debt
This term refers to all recurring and non-recurring financial debt minus cash and cash equivalents, as well as derivative instruments linked to Group financing. It also includes debt from application of the IFRS 16 standard “Lease contracts” in addition to short-term investments with no risk of a substantial change in value but with maturities of over three months.
Loyalty program (LP)
These programs, run by distribution retailers, consist in offering promotional offers on a product category to loyal consumers who have made a series of purchases within a short period of time. These promotional programs allow distributors to boost footfall in their stores and our consumers to access our products at preferential prices.
This press release may contain certain forward-looking statements regarding Groupe SEB’s activity, results and financial situation. These forecasts are based on assumptions which seem reasonable at this stage, but which depend on external factors including trends in commodity prices, exchange rates, the economic climate, demand in the Group’s large markets and the impact of new product launches by competitors.
As a result of these uncertainties,
The factors which could considerably influence Groupe SEB’s economic and financial result are presented in the Annual Financial Report and Universal Registration Document filed with the Autorité des Marchés Financiers, the French financial markets authority. The balance sheet and income statement included in this press release are excerpted from financial statements consolidated as of
Conference with management on
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Upcoming events – 2022 |
|
|
9-month 2022 sales and financial data |
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