[Foreign language]
[Foreign language]
Good morning, everybody. I'm Miguel Coronel Granado, Director for Markets of the group. Thank you very much for connecting to this earnings presentation of the first nine months. We have submitted this document that we're going to be discussing this morning to the CNMV. As you know, this presentation is set within the policy that we have established to have these regular meetings of quarterly earnings to provide a global overview of the performance of our main areas of activity.
First of all, I would like to share with you that in this first nine months, the evolution as a whole of revenues and operational results have been aligned with our targets, in spite of the fact that, as you know, the environment is quite uncertain as a result of price tensions, increases in the price of money and the impact of different external factors.
Having said this, I will review the first operational milestones of the first nine months. Revenues of our group over the period grew by 13.9% to over EUR 5 billion. There's been a double-digit increase across all the different business areas of the group, particularly, and we will look at this in greater detail, an organic expansion in environment and also an increase in the perimeter that we've had with real estate.
With respect to the EBITDA, growth was also double digit. It increased by 15.4% to EUR 940 million. This is a reflection of what I said about the evolution of revenues, but also an increase in the profits provided by the different exploitations of water and real estate because of acquisitions and because of some takeovers in real estate in November 2021, if you remember, and in water from February this year. At the level of EBITDA, well, we have been able to compensate for higher costs. The increase in prices, especially of energy, is quite visible, particularly in the cement business area.
At a consolidated level, our operational margin increased, and it rose to 17%, as compared with 17.7% of the same period of last year. As regards the evolution of the bottom line, in the same period as last year, particularly in the first and third quarters of 2021, we had the effect on the books of the sale of different energy assets.
On the whole, at nine months last year, for both concepts, we have a positive contribution of over EUR 89 million. It is true that we should also mention that this year, as in previous quarters, we've had a positive effect from the FX because many currencies have appreciated with respect to the euro, and they rose the amount by EUR 68 million under this chapter.
We have these two effects and these two forces, which are of course non-recurrent, and they are just one-off effects. Together with other factors, our attributable profit fell to EUR 358 million as a result of the one-off transactions that I mentioned. Other variables at a consolidated level are as follows.
Our financial debt closed at EUR 3.5 billion. The increase that we had been having in previous quarters with respect to the close of last year is still there. It's an increase of 10% with respect to the previous December. You've got to consider that in net terms, well, we've got to consider the takeover of GGU for integrated water cycle in Georgia.
You've got to consider both the amount of the transaction and the debt that was consolidated. All of this had an effect on the net debt balance, and we're still making investments, especially across different environmental and water-related projects. If we compare the net financial debt against that of June last year, there's been a slight reduction.
In June last year, we were around EUR 3.6 billion. Now net assets again underwent an increase. We reached over EUR 5 billion, 14% higher than December last year. This is a result of the increase in the net profits and the attributable profits of EUR 308 million and EUR 58 million. I also want to draw your attention to the evolution of our consolidated revenues, which is still showing significant strength.
At the end of the September 30th last year, it increased by 32% across all the different business areas. We almost reached EUR 40 billion, which is a historic figure. Of course, this was homogeneous across all business areas, but we had significant growth in the construction business area, followed by water, utilities, and the environment. Now, with respect to our environmental activity at an operational level, here, the revenues increased by 12.3% to EUR 2.6 billion. We have signed new contracts for waste collection, street cleaning, particularly in the United States, but also some new incorporations in the Spanish markets, in Iberia.
This was also accompanied by waste treatment in the U.K., followed by the United States, a higher level of activity with the organic perimeter we have in Central Europe. More specifically, market by market, the most important market in terms of its contribution is Spain. Revenues increased by 7.7%. We reached EUR 1.4 billion. I mentioned that, there's been a very good performance in our waste collection activities and street cleaning activities.
At a municipal level, we had new contracts that have joined our portfolio, which have compensated lower revenues from waste treatment in Spain because the plants that were most highly developed have now entered into the operational phase, but still, the operation was clearly positive. In the second market, which is the United Kingdom, here the revenues increased by 13%.
The revaluation of sterling by 2% had a significant effect. We reached EUR 593 million in revenues. Here I just want to mention the revenues produced by our waste treatment plants. In the case of Central Europe, revenues rose to EUR 450 million. This is 9%. We had harmonic growth across the three activities we have, which, as you know, are collection, cleaning, treatment.
Here I want to mention that in the six markets where we operate in Europe, that the recovery activity and especially harnessing secondary raw materials have, you know, been very successful, especially in the largest markets, namely the Czech Republic and Austria, and also in the United States, together with other markets, other minor markets, the increase was 79% over the first nine months of the year.
We have had new contracts, both for waste collection also in the United States, in Texas and Central Florida, and a new processing and recovery contract in California. It is true that the 79%, as you know, also includes a contribution from the evolution of the U.S. dollar, which value increased by 12% over the period.
The EBITDA for this area grew by 10.8%. Obviously, this reflects all the factors we mentioned, particularly the increase in our revenues for the different reasons I mentioned. This made it possible for us to compensate for the increase in the cost of energy that we had to face over the period.
In addition, I should say that there have been some activities, the so-called other environmental urban services, which had lower margins. As I say, the growth has been quite harmonic. I mean, it's been double-digit, both in terms of revenues and EBITDA, and this is the main business area of the group. Now let's turn to water. Here, revenues increased by 11.5% to EUR 970 million.
I just want to mention, and I mentioned it before, the incorporation on the first of February this year, of the Georgia Global Utilities, GGU, which was also accompanied by good performance of the consumption of the so-called non-residential customers. This is what we call a rebalancing, a post-pandemic rebalancing, especially on the Spanish coast.
You know, tourist consumption went back to normal. It is true that water, we had lower activity levels in what we call technology and networks, which are activities whereby we build water-related infrastructures. This was in line with our forecast because we knew that some international contracts would have a lower contribution, especially in the MENA region. This has been compensated by a higher activity in other infrastructures where we have been very active.
To be more specific, region by region, in the Spanish market, in terms of water, we grew by 5.3%, EUR 639 million. Here, as I said, the concession, the integrated water cycle concession activity in the domestic market, well, experienced a significant increase because of non-domestic consumption. Technology and networks activities experienced a very significant development.
In Central and Eastern Europe, particularly the Czech Republic and Georgia, our revenues increased by 65%. Of course, this reflects the takeover of this Georgian company. Now we have a stake of 80% in this company. If you look at different markets, for example, in Czechia, the performance was also favorable. We had a slightly positive effect of the exchange rate of the Czech koruna.
In general, the situation of the integrated cycle, the development of the integrated cycle business was quite similar to that in Spain. In the MENA region, where we have a higher amount of concessions increase, there was an increase, also an increase in revenues by 23.4% here. The concessions accounted for more than technology and networks because some of the plants, you know, were expected to be decommissioned over this period. In Latin America, there was a reduction in revenues by 22.3%, again, because of technology and networks, where the activity was much lower because many contracts in Mexico and Colombia came to an end.
In the future, there will be a higher level of integrated cycle activity because of some takeovers that we've made and some awards we've won in Colombia, in the northern part of the country. As regards EBITDA of this area increased by 21.1% overall, much more than the increase in revenues. We reached EUR 263 million. Of course, there's different elements that explain this.
First of all, the higher margin of the operational activities of GGU, because as you know, GGU renders integrated cycle services on the basis of proprietary infrastructures. So this allowed us to significantly compensate for the higher cost of energy, especially in terms of electrical energy. So the EBITDA of this area increased by over 200 basis points. It you know accounted for 27% of sales.
Now constructions. This area had revenues of EUR 1.3 billion, 12.6% higher. Here the evolution was reasonable. The pace of execution of projects was quite aligned with our target. Geography by geography in Spain, well, in Spain, it contributed slightly less than 50% of the total revenues.
In Spain, there was a slight reduction in revenues of 4.8%, EUR 622 million. Here, the most important project we have is that of the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium. There were other minor projects, both public and private, which explained that we had that small reduction in that in this period. In other jurisdictions, for example, in the rest of Europe, the turnover increased more sharply. We reached EUR 335 million.
I want to mention the pace of the works carried out last year and this year, especially the roads in the U.K. and in the Netherlands, especially in Wales and near Amsterdam. This has had a very significant contribution to our earnings. As regards the Americas, and particularly in Latin America, and Canada, increased revenues reached EUR 292 million.
Here there's been a significant increase in the contribution of the Tren Maya in Mexico, and as I was saying, there's an incipient contribution of a railway contract in Canada for suburban trains around Toronto. This is, you know, one of the important contracts that we've signed over these nine months. In other areas in the Middle East, we reached EUR 111 million.
Here you know that the most important project is that of the three metro lines of Riyadh in Saudi Arabia. Now in the MENA region, this contract has been extended by EUR 200 million. Now the project is going to be finalized in May 2024. We've now added a new project which we have been awarded, which is the performance of a railway tunnel to a city on the northwestern coast of Saudi Arabia. The amount this project is over EUR 700 million, which accounts for 12% of the total portfolio. With all of this, the EBITDA had increased by 14% to EUR 86.5 million in the area.
This was quite harmonic, and it just reflects the evolution of the revenues, plus some positive adjustments of margins that we carried out in some contracts as the development and execution process advanced. Now let's turn to cement. Here, our revenues rose. As we have seen in previous quarters, they rose by 15.9%.
We reached EUR 377 million. Price hikes have still been implemented, although there's been a slight volume contraction. If we add the higher export activities from both, production markets, both Spain and Tunisia, this explains how we reached that positive figure, but with different volumes and prices. Particularly in Spain, which is still the most significant market, the turnover increased by 16.2%. We had EUR 230 million in revenues.
There was a double-digit increase in prices, which has compensated for the fall in the volumes that we have seen, although they are still lower than 10%. The net result allowed us to grow in an environment which has not been easy. In the local Tunisian market, particularly domestic sales in the country, revenues here fell slightly by 2.4%. We had EUR 44 million in revenues.
In Spain, there was a reduction in demand similar to that in the other markets, but prices rose less and later. That's the reason why there was a slight reduction in total revenues. Exports still contributed a significant amount. They increased by 25.3% over the nine months period to EUR 103 million.
Exports are made from our plants in the north of Spain to markets in Central Europe and Northern Europe and also from Tunisia to the west of Libya. Now, with all of this, in spite of the growth in revenues, EBITDA fell with respect to the same period of last year by 66% to EUR 22.1 million. Here, the only explanation for this reduction is the increase in energy prices, both electrical energy and the fuel used in our furnaces. Of course, we need to say that Well, we traded some CO2 rights this year. Well, last year there was this sale, and this year there was no sale, and that also explains the reduction. Our fifth business area now is real estate. Here, revenues increased to EUR 257 million.
This is a significant leap of over 200% with respect to last year. As you know, revenues will still not be fully comparable because you should remember that in November last year, the Realia and Gecina group became part of our business. If you look at that figure, well, EUR 79 million came from rental property, which was non-existent last year.
Then there's another EUR 77.4 million that corresponded to the housing development activity and the land sales. This is comparable to the revenues we had last year in real estate, which was EUR 59 million. Of course, Realia developments last year were not still there. The EBITDA for real estate already accounts for a significant amount, EUR 84.1 million, because of all the reasons I mentioned just now.
You can see the significant also contribution of rental property because, you know, the margin is always 55%. I don't want to run on, ladies and gentlemen. I have reviewed all of our main operational variables, the evolution of our business areas. I think that again, I would just close by saying that the structure of the group, which as you know, is well-balanced, diverse. You know, we have kept applying selective growth.
We have made significant investments, and this has allowed us to keep very solid development. If you look at the different business areas, environment, water and real estate, they account for 83% of the EBITDA over this nine-month period. This is an essential element to understand our evolution so far and, you know, how we can still, you know, be expected to reach our targets. That's all I wanted to share with you. I want to thank you very much for your kind attention. If you have any questions, do not hesitate to ask them. We could start with the Spanish channel. Questions in Spanish.
Thank you very much. Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. The Q&A session will begin now. If you wish to ask any questions, please dial one on your telephones. To ensure that the sound is appropriate, please use a landline. Thank you. The first question comes from Víctor Isidro from Société Générale. Go ahead, please.
Hello, Miguel. Good morning. Thank you for your presentation. I wanted to ask you a couple of things about the group, and the first question has to do with inflation. How is the group affected by the current inflation rate environment? How are you positioned with respect to the inflation in terms of your debt and the impact you may have on your cash flow?
The second question has to do with the evolution of operational cash flows. How are they performing? How is working capital performing over this nine-month period? Is it aligned with the budget? Is it better than the expectation? One third question, if I may. In the current macro context, where people are talking about recession and an economic slowdown, what would you say about the collection of your invoices? A few years ago, you had problems with people defaulting on payments. How are you going to make sure? Because councils, local councils, may face economic difficulties and be unable to pay your invoices.
Thank you, Víctor. I will look at the different topics one by one. Well, with respect to the impact of inflation, I mentioned that we have 83% of our group's EBITDA, which has generated real estate leases, water activities and the environment. Now, as far as real estate is concerned, a significant part of the EBITDA of that business area is leases. You know, the rises are all related to the consumer price index. Our contracts are very well protected with you know against environments of this kind. With respect to water activities, I was talking about integrated cycles. As you know, this contributes around 90% of the EBITDA of the water activity.
Here, integrated or partial cycle contracts, all of them have their price hike clauses, which take into account the evolution of costs. Normally, at the end of every financial year, we look at the evolution of prices and we make the appropriate rises. Now with respect to the environmental activity, most of our contracts in waste collection, street cleaning and processing, they're also quite well protected.
Street cleaning and waste collection contracts are free of those de-indexing regulations because they are long-term contracts. All of them are signed for periods over five years. They include a lot of elements to protect us. At the end of each year, we can also revise them. For construction, our contracts are also long-term.
The evolution that we have experienced with respect to the understanding of, the readjustments coming from the pandemic, the post-pandemic effects of, downtimes and material costs are also being managed properly. We believe that all of those things can be managed quite reasonably and have a well-balanced effect.
I would say that the only activity which is more exposed to the evolution of, inflation is the cement activity, which is an activity which over nine months contributed only five months of our overall EBITDA. We're not too concerned about that. I think that overall the group has, because of the nature of our activities, can enjoy a very reasonable protection against inflation. Now as far as costs are concerned, we can't really give you too many details because we believe that it's not better not to provide too many details.
I can tell you that we have clinched long-term contracts for 2023 for electrical supply, both for cement and for water, which will be very positive for us, especially in 2023, and will help us mitigate the high costs of energy. Both in terms of revenues and costs, I think we will be able to manage the environment appropriately, although things will not be plain sailing.
With respect to the macro situation you asked. Well, with respect to the working capital you were asking, over nine months, although there's still a certain level of absorption with respect to last financial year, we had a much better performance. I would say that with respect to our target, we are doing well.
We are reasonably satisfied, and we believe that from now to the end of the year, there will still be a recovery. For the whole year, I think that the evolution of working capital or the conversion of EBITDA into cash will be reasonably satisfactory. Even, you know, mean collection times, which we follow up very strictly, are also evolving in a satisfactory way.
We are quite happy with that. I mean, what you were asking about potential problems with our getting paid for our bills, I would say that the situation now is a lot different from what it used to be, particularly in Spain. The problem in Spain a few years ago was that councils, well, nobody knew how much money councils owed their suppliers.
This was changed with the law that was introduced a few years ago. An effort was made to pay up all the debts, and we had to make our own contribution as a supplier at that time, particularly in our environmental activities, where we deal with a lot of public customers. Now the situation is a lot different. It's not. Well, councils, first of all, are in a much better financial situation, but the law, the legal framework is radically different. The issue is not so much that our customers are over-leveraged. I think that they're in a much better situation than they used to be, and the legal framework is a lot different.
The mean periods to pay suppliers are under strict control, but we believe that the situation is structurally different from the situation of 10 years ago. Miguel, just one last question. In terms of your debt, do you have a significant rollover of your debt at the level of maturities that may impact your rates? How much of your debt is at a fixed cost or at a variable cost?
Now, our debt at a variable rate is 34% of our debt is at a variable rate. From September to September of 2023, there's not very much that matures, or there's not much to be refinanced. The mean cost of debt that we have now is around 2%. We will see, and we will try and manage things as interest rates evolve.
Of course, we will have to face up to that. You know that our financial structure, our leverage structure, is basically skewed towards our leases. In terms of water and the environment, which are recurrent activities, well, we will have to abide by, you know, the evolution of the price of money. We don't have a high percentage of debt at a variable rate, just the opposite. In the next 12 months, as we speak, we will not have to refinance anything. That is really quite reassuring and, you know, allows us to wait and see.
Thank you very much.
Thank you. Next question, please. Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we remind you that if you want to ask a question, please dial zero one on your keypad. Thank you. If you want to ask any questions, please dial zero one on your keypad. Thank you. We have a question on the English channel. We are going to give.
The next question comes from Nadia Sherif from Schroders. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. I just had a few questions on the environmental side. One question was, you say that you don't have any refinancing for the next 12 months, but you do have a bond maturing for FCC Medio Ambiente 2023. Could you just tell us what your plans or sensitivities on refinancing that bond are? And also in terms of your energy, the energy that's used within the business for environmental.
Can you tell me how much of the energy is produced in-house, for example, like, are you a net energy provider, a net energy purchaser, or are you just able to pass on the cost? Just a little more understanding of how the energy costs pass through, particularly within the Aqualia Czech side of the business works? And also do you have any internal targets or data on the recovery rate of the waste that you sort and process? Just three questions from us there. Thank you.
Hello, Nadia. Thank you for your questions. Well, regarding the refinancing that we have in environmental activity, you're right. We have EUR 600 million, which are due on December 3, 2023. I think if I remember well, it's the December 3rd 2023. And yes, I mean, when I talked to your colleague previously that we have no any relevant refinancing ahead, I was thinking from nine months, September, until nine months, 2023. That's why, you know, the outlook is quite desirable for the next 12 months. You're right. On December, in 14 months from now, or 13 months as we speak, we'll have this EUR 600 million. Well, we look at it with, you know, a high degree of comfort. We'll see what the conditions are.
You know, this is a long-term maturity activity from the asset side. We'll look at the different options as we did in Aqualia, in the water activity in the first half of this year. I think we'll have at our reach, you know, different options, you know, among the capital markets or banking solution. Again, I restate that we have, you know, a full range of options open. We have time enough. The activity is performing well, as I'm saying. I said before, which I think for us is the critical thing. The credit value is there. You know, time enough ahead to go through these, you know, these troubled waters for now.
We'll see, you know, at the, you know, along 2023, how we deal with these EUR 600 million, you know. Which is, I would point out the only relevant refinancing that we have in 2023, all considered on the top of the EUR 5 billion of gross debt that the FCC group has at the end of September. We'll see along next year how to deal with this. As I said, from a very solid position in the activity performance, especially regarding and also in this field, as you mentioned, in FCC Medio Ambiente, how we look or how we approach to energy.
Within energy, we have a double exposure or revenue cost exposure. In the waste collection and street cleaning activity, of course, we use fossil fuels to some extent, a combination of different fossil fuels to provide the service that we render to municipalities. In this respect, of course, we have been suffering the 35% rise on average that we've seen in the different jurisdictions in the cost of the fuel, at the spot prices that we have been subject to. This could amount to roughly a 3%-4% of our total cost over sales, you know, in the whole environmental service division. On the contrary side, on revenues, we have the positive exposure.
I think this is one of the virtues of our combined structure in environmental business or unit itself. We have a revenue stream coming from the valorization, the Energy from Waste plants that we have in several locations, as is the case, many of them in the U.K. Because of the energy prices that we've seen also soaring, in some markets and, U.K. or others have not been an exception of this, as you probably know well. We have been along 2022, and the nine-month result is quite visible. We've been able to quite balance or have a net neutral effect, from all this. I mean, it doesn't mean that mathematically, this is gonna happen every year the same. We'll see what happens in 2023.
In 2022, in the nine months that we've seen, probably we have had an even effect from, you know, rising costs in energy for, you know, the fuels used in solid urban waste collection and street cleaning versus the increase in revenues and the corresponding positive EBITDA effect that we've seen coming from the Energy from Waste made at higher prices.
If this is gonna happen exactly the same, quite, you know, neutral in 2023, well, it depends, you know. They're not exactly the same markets, but there's some connections, as you know. At the end, it's all energy related. We'll see. So far, you know, the combination has performed quite nicely. Regarding the target for recovery. In these moments, well, what we are now looking in the
This varies quite a lot and depends on the jurisdiction we talk about. For instance, in Iberia, if we talk about MBTs, or in the U.S., I mentioned, the Placer County MBT site, we have the targets for recovery of all the products, you know, from households that we collect in the region between 55%-65%. In the case of the U.K., we have the target of raising the amounts that we recover, including even the household waste recovery centers, but also going up to the energy from waste plants, have recovery rates at the point of being able to get regions in the 65%.
Of course, the rest will be, of course, the fraction or the rejection will be burned in the sites where we have this solution. These are the targets that we aim at globally. We would be moving from 55% to 65%. It's a little bit open because as you know, the waste that we get not always is collected by us, not always a selective collection. This is on average the targets we aim at depending the different equipment solutions and jurisdictions. I don't know if I've completely
You've more than answered my question. That's very helpful. Thank you. Thank you.
Okay. No, thanks, Nadia.
Thank you.
Any other question?
Thank you very much. There are no more questions. Dear speaker, back to you.
Okay. Thank you very much. Get in touch with us through the usual channel. Thank you very much. I wish you a very good day. Thank you, ladies and gentlemen.