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NASPERS LIMITED - INTERIM REPORT

Release Date: 29/11/2004 09:00
Code(s): NPN
Wrap Text

NASPERS LIMITED - INTERIM REPORT NASPERS LIMITED (Registration number 1925/001431/06) ISIN: ZAE000015889 JSE share code: NPN ("Naspers") INTERIM REPORT The reviewed results of the Naspers group for the six months ended 30 September 2004 are as follows: Abridged Income Statement Six months Six months Year ended ended ended 30 Sept 2004 30 Sept 2003 31 March 2004
Reviewed Reviewed Audited R"m R"m R"m Revenue 6 707 6 120 12 804 Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda) 1 529 1 149 2 439 Depreciation (276) (314) (635) Operating profit before amortisation and impairment 1 253 835 1 804 Amortisation (27) (197) (484) Impairment of programming rights - - (31) Operating profit 1 226 638 1 289 Finance costs (123) (385) (664) Share of profit of associates 34 1 3 Exceptional items 345 31 48 Profit before taxation 1 482 285 676 Taxation (358) (176) (176) Minority interest (60) (89) (128) Net profit attributable to shareholders 1 064 20 372 Core headline earnings for the period (R"m) 519 267 534 Core headline earnings per N ordinary share (cents) 188 103 207 Headline earnings for the period (R"m) 716 156 779 Headline earnings per N ordinary share (cents) 259 60 302 Fully diluted headline earnings per N ordinary share 243 60 294 Earnings per N ordinary share (cents) 385 8 144 Fully diluted earnings per N ordinary share (cents) 361 8 140 Net number of shares issued (`000) - At period-end 278 816 258 385 261 619 - Weighted average for the period 276 658 258 099 257 814 - Fully diluted weighted average 294 485 259 751 265 188 Abridged Cash Flow Statement Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended 30 Sept 2004 30 Sept 2003 31 March 2004 Reviewed Reviewed Audited R"m R"m R"m
Cash generated from operations 609 372 1 746 Dividends paid (178) (82) (109) Cash flow from operating activities 431 290 1 637 Cash flow from investment activities (52) (376) (555) Cash flow from financing activities 68 (187) (555) Net movement in cash and cash equivalents 447 (273) 527 Abridged Statement of Changes in Equity Six months Six months Year ended ended ended 30 Sept 2004 30 Sept 2003 31 March 2004 Reviewed Reviewed Audited
R"m R"m R"m Balance at beginning of period 3 183 3 138 3 138 Movement in treasury shares (32) 6 79 Share capital and premium issued 760 - - Foreign currency translations 43 (154) (299) Movement in fair value reserve 20 6 (9) Movement in cash flow hedging reserve 18 (15) (20) Net profit attributable to shareholders 1 064 20 372 Dividends (106) (78) (78) Balance at end of period 4 950 2 923 3 183 Analysis of Exceptional Items Six months Six months Year ended ended ended 30 Sept 2004 30 Sept 2003 31 March 2004
Reviewed Reviewed Audited R"m R"m R"m (Loss)/profit on sale of investments (19) 33 23 Profit/(loss) on dilution of interest in investments 364 (2) 8 Reversal of asset impairment - - 17 Net exceptional items 345 31 48 Abridged Balance Sheet 30 Sept 2004 30 Sept 2003 31 March 2004 Reviewed Reviewed Audited
R"m R"m R"m ASSETS Non-current assets 6 778 6 549 6 314 Property, plant and equipment 3 228 3 496 3 274 Goodwill and other intangibles 2 422 2 531 2 491 Investments and loans 847 231 52 Programme and film rights 73 118 40 Deferred taxation 208 173 457 Current assets 6 903 6 067 6 778 TOTAL ASSETS 13 681 12 616 13 092 EQUITY AND LIABILITIES Share capital and reserves 4 950 2 923 3 183 Minority interest 221 205 235 Non-current liabilities 3 073 3 208 2 873 Capitalised finance leases 1 847 2 081 1 921 Liabilities - interest-bearing 781 670 572 - non-interest-bearing 154 178 129 Post-retirement medical liability 169 163 171 Deferred taxation 122 116 80 Current liabilities 5 437 6 280 6 801 TOTAL EQUITY AND LIABILITIES 13 681 12 616 13 092 Net asset value per N ordinary share (cents) 1 775 1 131 1 216 Calculation of Headline Earnings Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended 30 Sept 2004 30 Sept 2003 31 March 2004 Reviewed Reviewed Audited R"m R"m R"m
Net profit attributable to shareholders 1 064 20 372 Adjusted for : - impairment of programme rights - - 31 - exceptional items after tax (348) (31) (44) - amortisation of goodwill - 167 420 Headline earnings 716 156 779 Adjusted for : - currency translation differences 12 (25) (51) - creation of deferred tax assets - 3 (204) - amortisation of intangible assets 20 33 54 - AC133 fair value adjustments (229) 100 (44) Core headline earnings 519 267 534 Supplementary Information Six months Six months Year ended ended ended 30 Sept 2004 30 Sept 2003 31 March 2004 Reviewed Reviewed Audited
R"m R"m R"m Finance costs 123 385 664 - net interest (received)/paid (32) 71 154 - interest on finance leases 78 86 187 - net foreign exchange differences 17 (67) (63) - net fair value adjustments on derivatives (AC133) 60 295 386 Investments and loans 980 231 476 - listed investments 906 137 137 - unlisted investments 74 94 339 Market value of listed investments 2 122 137 137 Director s" valuation of unlisted investments 74 94 339 Commitments 1 575 1 805 1 743 - capital expenditure 184 220 394 - programme and film rights 1 135 1 191 995 - network and other commitments 241 352 165 - decoder commitments 15 42 189 Operating lease commitments 573 637 631 GROUP OVERVIEW The unusually favourable business climate previously reported to shareholders continued into the period under review. Most of our business units performed above expectation. Operating profit before amortisation and impairment charges for the period grew to R1 253 million, and core headline earnings to R519 million. FINANCIAL REVIEW Revenues for the period were relatively stable - up 10%. This modest growth was again largely due to the strength of the rand - 28% of the group"s revenues are generated from outside of South Africa. Operating profit expanded to R1 226 million. Finance costs of R123 million include fair value adjustments on derivative instruments of R60 million, a book charge required by AC133, and currency losses of R17 million. Interest on borrowings and imputed interest on finance leases totalled R46 million, against R157 million in the previous period. The share of profit of associates arises mostly from our investment in Tencent following its June listing. Exceptional items of R345 million relates primarily to the dilution profit arising on the listing of Tencent. A tax charge of R358 million reflects the higher level of profitability in the group. The net effect of the above is headline earnings of R716 million. We have previously cautioned shareholders on factor s which under- mine the credibility of headline earnings as a measure of sustainable operating performance. These factor s are analysed below in the `Calculation of Headline Earnings", but the major issue in the period under review relates to fair value adjustments required in terms of accounting standard AC133. These adjustments, in our view, ignore economic reality and have inflated headline earnings for the period by R229 million. Adjusting for this, and for other items prescribed by South African Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (SA GAAP), we estimate core headline earnings to be R519 million. This, in the opinion of our board, is a more reliable measure of sustainable operating per- formance. The group generated R431 million cash from operating activities. On 30 September 2004, the group had net consolidated cash of R2,1 billion, excluding capitalised satellite and other leases. SEGMENTAL REVIEW Revenue Six months ended 30 Sept 2004 2003 %
R"m R"m change Subscriber platforms 4 522 4 204 8 - pay television 3 970 3 544 12 - internet 422 525 (20) - technology 130 135 (4) Print media 1 599 1 358 18 Book publishing and private education 585 557 5 Corporate services 1 1 - 6 707 6 120 10 Ebitda
Six months ended 30 Sept 2004 2003 % R"m R"m change Subscriber platforms 1 198 927 29 - pay television 1 188 853 39 - internet 68 85 (20) - technology (58) (11) (427) Print media 332 222 50 Book publishing and private education 14 13 8 Corporate services (15) (13) (15) 1 529 1 149 33 Operating profit before amortisation and impairment Six months ended 30 Sept
2004 2003 % R"m R"m change Subscriber platforms 996 689 45 - pay television 1 021 664 54 - internet 40 42 (5) - technology (65) (17) (282) Print media 274 165 66 Book publishing and private education (1) (5) 80 Corporate services (16) (14) (14) 1 253 835 50 Operating profit
Six months ended 30 Sept 2004 2003 % R"m R"m change Subscriber platforms 970 514 89 - pay television 1 006 591 70 - internet 38 (38) - - technology (74) (39) (90) Print media 274 157 75 Book publishing and private education (2) (19) 89 Corporate services (16) (14) (14) 1 226 638 92
SUBSCRIBER PLATFORMS Pay television The aggregate pay-television subscriber base grew by 60 000 over the period, split evenly between South Africa and the offshore operations. The group now manages some 2,2 million pay-television subscriber s, 74% of whom subscribe to digital services. Pay-television revenues were up 12% and operating profits before amortisation and impairment grew to R1 021 million. In South Africa, the subscriber base lifted by 30 000 to 1,1 million homes. In sub-Saharan Africa, the subscriber base grew by 20 000 to 312 000. Our Greek pay-television business did very well to consolidate its recover y. The subscriber base for the Mediterranean region now numbers 348 000 subscriber s, and this business unit reached profitability for the first time. In Thailand, the UBC subscriber base expanded marginally to 448 000. Cable redistribution and copyright piracy remain barrier s to growth. Internet Tencent"s results were only included in the segmental review up to June 2004. In June, Tencent listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange and our effective holding diluted to 36%. As a consequence, this investment is now equity accounted. The decline in group internet revenues for the period arises mainly from this change in accounting for Tencent. Tencent continued to perform well over the past six months, despite increased competition, and reported total revenues of US$69 million. Operating profits increased to US$27 million. The core QQ instant-messaging platform has grown to some 119 million active users. Registered subscriptions to fee-based value-added internet services declined by 9% to 6,6 million, whilst subscriptions for value- added mobile and telecommunications services remained flat at 12,5 million. This modest performance is a result of renewed efforts to remove inactive user accounts, new double confirmation subscriber procedures and billing systems introduced by the Chinese mobile operator s. These factor s are expected to continue to affect registered subscriptions during the months ahead. In South Africa, the MWEB subscriber base remained stable at 240 000 subscribers with the business generating a small operating profit before amortisation and impairment of R27 million. The lack of internet innovation in South Africa as a result of the Telkom monopoly on fixed-line telephony remains a factor retarding the mar ket"s development. MWEB made an offer to purchase the inter- net business of Tiscali for R320 million. This transaction is subject to regulatory approval. In China, the Sportscn portal grew revenues by 141% and reported an operating loss of R7 million as it continued to expand its operations. In Thailand, the operating loss before amortisation was reduced to R11 million. Technology The technology unit had a 4% decline in revenues, a consequence of the strong rand. This unit reported an increased operating loss of R74 million flowing from increased research and development spend in both Irdeto Access and Entriq. Irdeto Access grew its revenues in US dollar terms, its trading currency, by 9%. PRINT MEDIA Revenue grew by 18% over the period. Buoyant advertising conditions and improved margins boosted operating profit before amortisation and impairment. New publications continued to grow. Daily Sun, Wegbreek, a new travel magazine, and tuis, a new home decor and garden monthly, all exceeded expectations with circulation figures. The Wisden Cricketer debuted in November as a monthly magazine. Local versions of Drum and True Love were launched in Kenya, whilst the Nigerian version of True Love will appear in December. Construction has commenced on a new commercial and magazine printing plant in Gauteng. Presses have been ordered, with the first expected to be operational in mid-2005. BOOK PUBLISHING AND PRIVATE EDUCATION The book publishing and private education businesses reported improved profitability on the back of moderate revenue growth of 5%. The general book market experienced a slowdown in sales and the benefit of the strong rand in respect of imported books was passed on to customer s. Some delays occurred at various provincial education departments in issuing school book order s. Face-to-face private education enrolments have seen a decline, whilst the distance education businesses experienced more positive trading conditions. For some time the group has been pruning marginal educational businesses that cannot be integrated with the main trademarks. As previously indicated, the book and private education businesses have been more closely integrated resulting in beneficial cost reductions. PROSPECTS In general, the markets in which our major business units operate are in expansive phases of the economic cycle. We foresee this continuing for the remainder of the present financial year. However, business cycles are prone to turn and shareholders should antic- ipate leaner times sometime in the future. The group continues to seek new growth opportunities, particularly in the rest of Africa and in Asian markets. Costs will be incurred in further developing Irdeto Access"s product portfolio, as well as in the development of Entriq and of the Sportscn business in China. As regards black economic empowerment (BEE), the group views this as a major imperative for the year ahead. We trust that the South African government will issue clear guidelines for the economy as a whole, and that Balkanisation as a result of conflicting charter s can be avoided. A broad-based BEE scheme is planned for the year ahead. ACCOUNTING POLICIES These abridged, consolidated interim financial statements comply with South African Statements of Generally Accepted Accounting Practice and were prepared in accordance with AC127 - Interim Financial Reporting. The same accounting policies and methods of computation have been followed in this interim report as in the annual financial statements for the year ended 31 March 2004, except for the adoption of AC140 - Business Combinations and the revised statements AC128 - Impairment of Assets and AC129 - Intangible Assets. These statements have been applied prospectively from 1 April 2004 in terms of their respective transitional pro- visions. In terms of AC129 goodwill is no longer amortised. The effect of the adoption of AC140 and AC128 was immaterial for the period under review. These interim financial statements have been reviewed by the company"s auditors, PricewaterhouseCoopers Inc., whose report is available for inspection at the registered offices of Naspers. On behalf of the board: Ton Vosloo Koos Bekker Chairman Managing director 29 November 2004 (For a more detailed exposition, visit the Naspers website at www.naspers.com) Directors T Vosloo (chairman), JP Bekker (managing director), E Botha, F du Plessis, GJ Gerwel, RCC Jafta, LN Jonker, SJZ Pacak, FTM Phaswana, BJ van der Ross, NP van Heerden, JJM van Zyl, HSS Willemse. Company secretary GM Coetzee Registered office 40 Heerengracht, Cape Town 8001 (PO Box 2271, Cape Town 8000) Transfer secretaries Ultra Registrars (Proprietary) Limited Fifth Floor, 11 Diagonal Street, Johannesburg 2001 (PO Box 4844, Johannesburg 2000) Naspers"s mission is to build shareholder value by operating subscriber platforms that provide content, services and the means of communication to paying users; to sell related technologies and services and to be useful to the communities we serve. Date: 29/11/2004 09:00:16 AM Supplied by www.sharenet.co.za Produced by the JSE SENS Department

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