Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.

Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber
Third-quarter figures reaffirm higher earnings forecast for 2021

BayWa remains on track for success

BayWa AG is on track to achieve its highest earnings yet in its nearly 100 years of existence as a company. In the third quarter, BayWa increased its revenues to €14.3 billion (Q1–3/2020: €12.2 billion). Earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) jumped by around 87% to €191.7 million (Q1–3/2020: €102.7 million). Business was highly successful, particularly in the Renewable Energies business unit and in the Agriculture and Building Materials Segments.

“We succeeded in taking advantage of the largely favourable market environment while also deflecting the disruptions in global supply chains, thanks to our strategy and positioning,” says Prof. Klaus Josef Lutz, Chief Executive Officer of BayWa AG. Lutz expects numerous planned project sales in the Renewable Energies business unit and the continuation of dynamic development in the Agriculture and Building Materials Segments to act as the primary sources of sufficient tailwind for a year-end rally.

“We are currently reaping the benefits of what we have been sowing since 2008: our strategy of internationalising agricultural trade, investing in renewable energies and, most recently, restructuring our agricultural business in northern and eastern Germany – all that is now paying off.”

Flourishing trade in photovoltaic (PV) components was the main factor behind another strong quarter in the Energy Segment, making it possible to more than compensate for the anticipated decline in business in the Conventional Energy business unit. High prices and increased volatility on international grain exchanges bolstered Cefetra Group’s trade activities. The business unit’s German agricultural trade activities also took advantage of the rise in agricultural commodity prices. In the first three quarters, the Agricultural Equipment business unit slightly outperformed the same period in the previous year, which also saw strong performance. Although the weather-related obstacles and the problems caused by the coronavirus pandemic continued to have an impact on international fruit trading, BayWa Global Produce GmbH still expects the annual result to match the level achieved in 2020. Thanks to higher trade margins and a nearly unencumbered ability to deliver goods and services, earnings in the Building Materials Segment once again increased significantly. BayWa expects a substantial rise in operating earnings for 2021, provided the weather continues to be seasonal in the remaining weeks of the year.

Agriculture Segment
Revenues in the Agriculture Segment amounted to €9.0 billion at the end of the third quarter (Q1–3/2020: €8.1 billion). EBIT came to €111.4 million (Q1–3/2020: €77.5 million). In commodities trading, the Cefetra Group business unit benefited from high demand coupled with low grain availability. Specialities trading was also very successful, particularly with starch products and plant-based proteins. In Germany, BayWa benefited from a variety of factors, including poorer grain quality in France, and successfully closed gaps in its export network by forging connections with regions such as Saudi Arabia and northern Africa.

BayWa Agrarhandel GmbH, which has managed the Group’s agricultural trade activities in northern and eastern Germany since 1 January 2021, recorded a roughly 20,000-tonne increase year on year in the volume of goods processed through block train logistics and Baltic Sea ports despite having fewer local grain warehouses. The Agri Trade & Service business unit has good sales prospects in the months to come as well. However, due to the very high prices at the present time and the decision by some manufacturers to scale back their production activities, the further development of fertilizer sales remains uncertain following a strong season.

In Agricultural Equipment, which benefited from high demand for used machinery and for servicing and workshop services, BayWa reports full order books for new machinery. With producers currently facing a shortage of chips, the extent to which the orders can be fully processed this year depends on the ability of the manufacturers to make deliveries. A lack of containers, high freight costs and a shortage of seasonal workers had a negative impact on earnings for the Global Produce business unit.

BayWa expects the marketing of the German apple harvest and an increase in demand for exotic fruits during the Christmas season to have a positive effect on operating earnings for the year. Furthermore, the business unit anticipates extraordinary income from the sale of a location in New Zealand.

 

Click here to read the full press release.

For more information:
Antje Krieger
BayWa AG
Tel.: +49 89 9222-3692
Fax: +49 89 9212-3692
Email: antje.krieger@baywa.de

Publication date: