Financial Mail and Business Day

Libstar to undergo strategic review

Consumer food brands conglomerate Libstar, owner of the Lancewood brand of dairy products, will be looking at opportunities for unlocking value in the short term.

Marc Hasenfuss FM Editor at Large hasenfussm@fm.co.za

Consumer food brands conglomerate Libstar, owner of the Lancewood brand of dairy products, will be looking at opportunities for unlocking value in the short term.

This was prompted by questions at Libstar’s AGM on Thursday morning, which coincided with the group’s share price trundling to a record low 362c on the JSE.

CEO Charl de Villiers said Libstar will be undergoing a strategic review next month to explore all options to unlock value for shareholders.

Earlier, shareholders raised the possibility of Libstar — one of the smaller players on the JSE’s food sector with a market value of R2.7bn — being lined up as a takeover target if the prevailing tough trading conditions triggered a consolidation phase.

Food producers face several strong headwinds including rising food inflation, increased input costs, higher interest rates, load-shedding and rapidly falling consumer spending.

De Villiers disclosed that at the current frequency loadshedding would cost Libstar about R40m over six months. “There is an accelerated investigation into solar power [by Libstar]. This is at the proposal stage for our baking business in Cape Town, and will then be rolled out aggressively to other centres.”

De Villiers said initiatives are under way to bolster ROIC (return on invested capital).

“More than 80% of Libstar’s intrinsic valuation resides in six businesses, and the R1.8bn invested in these businesses will yield the necessary returns to prove ROIC.

“One example would be our hard cheese upgrade in Lancewood, which supports our brand-leading position in that natural cheese segment.”

He said Libstar will look to increase its exposure to the export market both through a more concerted effort in its divisions and also through the recent acquisition of Cape Foods.

De Villiers intimated that lower returns are mostly the function of the cluster of smaller businesses that make up the other 20% of Libstar.

“The top six businesses have delivered superior returns compared with the remaining 20% of the portfolio. To address that 20% segment that is impacting on the broader results, we are simplifying and clustering the smaller divisions to eliminate duplicated costs and to build scale,” he said.

Meanwhile, Libstar is critically assessing divestment and other options in relation to underperforming business units such as Denny (mushrooms) and HPC (household cleaning products).

Smalltalkdaily Research analyst and Libstar shareholder Anthony Clark was keen to know whether the markedly weaker share price means executives will consider meaningful share buybacks.

De Villiers confirmed share buybacks will be one of the options under discussion at the upcoming strategic review.

Libstar chair Wendy Luhabe maintained that the current share price is not a reflection of the intrinsic value of the group. But she noted Libstar had also been affected by a rerating of the valuation of companies in the FMCG (fast moving consumer goods) sector from (earnings) multiples of 8.6 times to almost half that multiple at present.

Luhabe said significant capital investments were made in Libstar’s top six divisions since 2018, but these projects have not yet generated the expected returns due to the Covid-19 impasse and weak economic conditions.

“We remain confident that these capital investments were made in the right areas of the business and will significantly enhance our competitive advantage, our manufacturing capability and our capacity to enable us to capitalise on opportunities.”

AN ACCELERATED INVESTIGATION INTO SOLAR POWER ... IS AT THE PROPOSAL STAGE FOR OUR BAKING BUSINESS IN CAPE TOWN

Charl de Villiers Libstar CEO

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2023-06-02T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-06-02T07:00:00.0000000Z

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