
A sharp turnaround in the second half allowed NZ King Salmon Investments (NZKS) to eke out an annual $1.9 million net profit after reporting an almost crippling $73.2m loss in 2022.
The South Island salmon farmer鈥檚 earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (ebitda) came in at a loss of $4.4m for the year to January 31, compared to an ebitda profit of $6.7m in 2022.
The operating loss was better than the company鈥檚 original market guidance of an $8m 鈥 $12m ebitda loss.
Looking ahead, NZKS said its ebitda guidance for the current year was $21m to $25m.
Sales fell by 24 per cent to 5,837 tonnes and revenue dropped by 4 per cent to $167.1m.
The harvest this year is expected to improve to around 6,600 tonnes.
NZKS farms king salmon in Pelorus and Queen Charlotte Sounds in the Marlborough Sounds, as well as Tory Channel.
In recent years, the two sounds have seen聽.
In comparison, Tory Channel is exposed to southerly swells, has strong tidal currents, consistently colder water and has always been a haven for farming salmon during warmer months.
According to the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA), 2022 was the hottest year on record in New Zealand, driven by another La Ni帽a event.
This resulted in extremely high fish mortalities throughout January, February, and March.
鈥淎 key lesson when facing adversity is how you react to it,鈥 the company said in today鈥檚 result.
The company last year raised $60.1m from the market to restructure its balance sheet 鈥 repaying all bank debt on a net basis.
NZKS said its latest result was impacted by a 鈥渕ortality event鈥 in the first quarter which resulted in a higher mortality expense, lower available harvest and a decline in Salmon biomass at sea.
The half year loss came to $24.5m.
鈥淧erformance improved in the second half of the year with a significant reduction in mortality and a fair value uplift in our salmon biomass at sea,鈥 the company said.
The company has high hopes for its planned聽聽which it wants to build in the cooler and fast-moving waters of Cook Strait.
Environmental permission was granted in November.
Two appeals were subsequently lodged, and mediation began in March with the parties involved.
鈥淏lue Endeavour has the potential to add up to 10,000 tonnes of harvest volume in conjunction with our nursery sites when fully developed,鈥 it said.
Full capacity of existing sites plus Blue Endeavour would be 17,000 tonnes, the company said.
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