Wesfarmers to Take Big Impairment Hit
May 24 2016 - 11:40PM
Dow Jones News
SYDNEY—Wesfarmers Ltd. laid bare the potential pitfalls of
owning assets as diverse as department stores and coal mines on
Wednesday, saying it would take impairment charges of up to 2.3
billion Australian dollars (US$1.7 billion) after a slump in demand
for key products.
The biggest write-down of up to A$1.3 billion will be booked
against its discount store Target, which sells everything from
toasters to children's T-shirts, but has been hurt by the arrival
of foreign brands such as Zara and H&M to Australia's main
street in recent years.
Wesfarmers said it would also take a noncash impairment charge
of up to A$850 million against its Curragh coal mine in eastern
Australia's Queensland state, which supplies Asian steel mills and
power plants but has been bloodied by slumping prices of the
commodity.
Wesfarmers is Australia's biggest conglomerate with a market
value of more than A$46 billion, and has long justified a strategy
of owning a diverse range of assets on the grounds that it creates
long-term value for shareholders and provides a hedge against
swings in fortunes of individual businesses.
Its strategy, however, is increasingly unusual in global
business where activist investors in companies have made
'conglomerate' a dirty word. In the U.S., pressure on companies has
intensified to split up and concentrate on the most promising lines
of business.
General Electric Co. has been dismantling its sprawling
financial operations and smaller U.S. companies like Danaher Corp.
and Johnson Controls Inc. have opted to break themselves up.
Wesfarmers owns Australia's biggest supermarket chain, Coles,
and the Australian franchise of U.S. retailer Kmart. It also runs
tire-replacement workshops, office supplies shops, fertilizer
plants, protective equipment suppliers, along with stakes in a
sawmill and an investment bank.
On Wednesday, Wesfarmers said it remained committed to both the
coal-mining business and Target despite the magnitude of the
write-downs which will reduce its earnings in the year through
June, 2016.
"The decisions which we have outlined today reflect more
difficult market conditions in both Target and Curragh, but we
remain confident that operationally we have the right plans to
improve future performances over time," Chief Executive Richard
Goyder said.
Target has aggressively cut prices in a bid to attract shoppers
back to its stores, but the business has continued to struggle.
Last month, Wesfarmers said a probe into accounting irregularities
at Target had found its first-half earnings to be overstated by
A$21 million.
"Whilst Target has made operational progress in recent years,
market competition and disruption has continued to accelerate," Mr.
Goyder said.
Wesfarmers now expects Target to record an underlying A$50
million loss in the current financial year plus A$145 million of
restructuring costs and provisions as management needs to offer
discounts to shift surplus stock that didn't find favor with
shoppers. Its problems have been compounded by unexpectedly warm
autumn weather, particularly in eastern Australia, which has
reduced demand for seasonal ranges like coats and hats.
In the mining industry, Wesfarmers has grappled with thermal
coal prices tumbling by nearly a third over the past two years, as
demand from China cooled and supplies increased from mines planned
when prices were booming.
Wesfarmers' Curragh mine in Queensland's Bowen Basin produces
around 8.5 million metric tons of coking and thermal coal annually,
mostly for sale to Asia. A recent report by industry body the
Queensland Resources Council indicated roughly one third of coal
mines in Queensland are losing money.
Wesfarmers said its final dividend will be determined by the
group's underlying profit, which excludes the impairment charges
but includes the restructuring costs for Target.
Write to Rebecca Thurlow at rebecca.thurlow@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 24, 2016 23:25 ET (03:25 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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