Luceco plc (LON:LUCE)
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Apr 29, 2026, 4:36 PM GMT
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Earnings Call: H1 2022

Sep 6, 2022

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Hello and good morning, everybody, and thank you very much for attending the Luceco Interim Results Presentation for 2022. These results are in line with the update we issued in July. With revenue of GBP 186 million and operating profit of GBP 11.5 million. These results, although they are disappointing against last year, reflect some normalization following the extraordinary result that we had. There's been a slowdown in the DIY demand after lockdown, where, as we know now, there was a significant pull forward of demand. There is also significant, but a temporary headwind from our major distributors who overstock themselves during this period. The results remain well ahead of the pre-pandemic levels. Our revenue is up almost 30% against 2019, and our operating profit is up over 60%. On to the following slide.

We are well positioned for the macroeconomic uncertainty that lies ahead. Last year, cost inflation was a major issue, but we have basically managed to pass all of that into the market, and our gross margin in the second half of this year will be considerably better than in the first half. We made a successful entry to the EV charging market, which we think is a huge opportunity for the future, and the acquisition of that SyncEV business is going extremely well. We also bought an excellent lighting company called DW Windsor, which I will speak more about later. Our low carbon footprint on which we've been doing a huge amount of work is an increasingly important factor in our market. We also have a healthy balance sheet.

The outlook for the rest of this year, since the first half, our trading has been in line with our expectations. However, the market is continuing to slow, particularly in the DIY and hybrid sectors. However, professional contractor market has remained strong and is broadly stable. Therefore, we expect our full year earnings to be in line with market expectations. As you can see from our performance against 2019, we are emerging from the pandemic as a stronger business with our significant longer term growth prospects intact. With that, I will hand over to Matt.

Matthew Webb
CFO, Luceco

Okay, thank you, John. Morning to everyone on the call and on the webcast. Just before I take you through the detail of the financial performance, I just wanted to pull out some of the key highlights within our numbers, which is on slide 6. For those of you that have followed the Luceco story, you will know that the last year obviously was an outstanding year for the group. Within those outstanding 2021 results, we flagged that the first half was particularly strong. We enjoyed buoyant sales at healthy margins. The buoyant sales were obviously helped by the pandemic. In the first half of 2021, the furlough and vaccine programs combined to give consumers the confidence to spend. Sporadic lockdowns diverted that spending disproportionately towards home improvement, which obviously benefited us.

Our margins at that stage were also healthy, as they had not yet been meaningfully impacted by the wave of input cost inflation created by the global increase in demand for goods. In the current half year, we have perhaps inevitably fallen short of that record prior year performance as home improvement activity has begun to normalize post-COVID, and normalization of both demand and supply this year has prompted some of our larger distributor customers to reduce their own inventory of our products in their supply chains. This left our first half sales temporarily lower, widening the gap to last year, and I will talk more about this in a moment.

In terms of the numbers themselves, what you can see on the page here is that revenue came in, as John has said, at just over GBP 106 million, which was within 2% of last year's level, and with a reduction in like-for-like sales broadly offset by new sales contributed by acquisitions. Adjusted operating profit came in at GBP 11.5 million, which was 40% lower than last year, reflecting that reduction in like-for-like sales. And the reduction in EPS broadly mirrored that of adjusted operating profit. Whilst it is obviously naturally quite disappointing to fall short of last year's numbers, we do need to put this in some context. As our markets normalize, it is useful to also compare our results to the last set we published before COVID, namely the first half of 2019.

We have made this comparison on the slide, as you can see. As can be seen, the broader context of these results is that our performance remains well ahead of pre-pandemic levels, underlining the good strategic progress that we have made over recent years, which John will talk more about later. Okay, moving on to Slide 7, this provides a bit more color behind the profit performance. Once again, we provide on this slide an H1 2019 pre-COVID comparison. As I mentioned a moment ago, revenue came in at GBP 106.4 million, and that was the product of two factors. Firstly, a circa 17% like-for-like sales decline, and secondly, revenue added via the acquisition of DW Windsor last year and Sync EV this year.

One factor largely offset the other, leaving group revenue only 1.7% lower than last year. Revenue does remain nearly 29% higher than H1 2019, meaning we have undoubtedly gained share during the pandemic. Gross margin of 34% was lower than last year's record first half performance of 38.5%. This was largely due to the decline in like-for-like sales. Last year, we saw particularly strong demand for wiring accessories, which you may know is our highest margin product category and one that we also make in-house. This means that our manufacturing overhead within the business was spread over very high production output last year, and that benefited gross margin. This year, of course, we have seen the opposite effect, holding back margins.

Now, some of the reduction in wiring accessory volume this year has come from the impact of customer destocking that I referenced earlier, and that is certainly temporary in nature. That does mean that production utilization and therefore margin should begin to benefit once customers have rebalanced their own inventory levels. We are also seeing margins benefit from the evolution of cost inflation. We saw the selling price increases put in place to combat inflation come through in full effect during the half. The input cost inflation itself now seems to be reversing in areas that most impact us, so commodity prices, sea freight, et cetera. Although clearly this environment is quite fluid.

Collectively, this means that we exited the half at a gross margin of 36.5%, which was higher than what we achieved on average for the half as a whole, and obviously that's quite encouraging momentum for the second half. Turning to overheads, we kept these under tight control. Acquisitions added nearly GBP 3.7 million to our half yearly overhead bill, but total overheads only increased by GBP 2.2 million, meaning we lowered overheads across the rest of the group. This was thanks to lower variable pay and controlled discretionary spending. The net result of all of this was adjusted operating profit of GBP 11.5 million, 40% lower than a truly exceptional H1 2021 performance, but still 60% ahead of where we were pre-COVID.

Now, we were able to make some good progress on the tax line, so our adjusted effective tax rate has dropped steadily over recent years, and we have managed our tax matters better, and this year was no exception. We achieved an effective tax rate of 14.3% for H1 and should be able to maintain a rate of circa 15% for the year as a whole. Okay, slide eight provides a bit more detail on the revenue drivers. I mentioned earlier that our performance was impacted by customer stock movements. This drove the majority of the like-for-like revenue decline shown at the top of this slide. Let me explain this in a bit more detail. The construction products industry has experienced strong market conditions since the second half of 2020, particularly in the home improvement sector.

However, production and supply chain capacity in the market has not always been sufficient to fully meet this demand, having been reduced in the early days of COVID. In H1 2021, distributors serving the industry, i.e., our customers, responded to tight supply chain conditions by stocking up to maintain service levels and meet expected future demand increases. In short, they bought more of our products than they sold, and that obviously boosted our sales. In H1 2022, normality has begun to return to both demand and supply, allowing our distributor customers to reduce their stock levels, buying less from us than they have sold. We know this because with help from our customers, we have been able to compare their sales of our products to end users with our sales of our products to them. Any difference between the two is a stock movement.

We believe the net effect of these stock movements was a circa GBP 15 million reduction in revenue relative to the first half of 2021, which is obviously significant. Customer stock changes therefore drove the majority of the reduction in like-for-like sales that you see at the top of the page, and absent these actions by our customers, our like-for-like sales would have declined by approximately 2.5%, not 16.5%. I'm sure this was happening across the industry, but the impact on us is large because, A, we have large customers serving the hottest construction market, namely home improvement. B, these customers buy directly from us in China, i.e., on an FOB basis, and that involves a long lead time, and long lead times mean they have to hold a lot of inventory.

In 2021, we were not fully aware that this was happening. Manufacturers like us generally don't have good visibility of the stock of their products that are held elsewhere in their supply chain. We have worked hard over the last few months to get and keep the visibility that we need. This destocking phase will continue into the second half of this year and early 2023, but there is some good news within this. Firstly, this destocking phase is fundamentally temporary, and most unusual in terms of its size and duration. It is very much a function of the unprecedented circumstances created by the pandemic. Secondly, end user demand for our products is clearly better than our revenue line currently suggests.

Okay, moving on to slide nine, there is no question that temporary customer destocking meant that our sales underperformed the wider market in the period. The key question is how did we perform versus the market absent destocking? This is relevant since this is the performance we will see when destocking inevitably comes to an end. In short, we believe our addressable market slowed by 2% in the period. Admittedly, that's a 2% decline that is net of a very big price increase driven by cost inflation across the industry. Given our selling prices are on average 12% higher than last year, and we believe that we have broadly followed the market on price, this says market volumes are about 14% lower than a year ago, and clearly that's a fairly significant slowdown.

The majority of that volume slowdown came within the DIY market as consumers rediscovered old ways to spend their money, e.g., travel and entertainment. Whereas the professional residential RMI market was, by contrast, fairly flat. We believe this held up better since electricians continued to complete residential renovation work that was won last year. Non-residential and infrastructure sectors were more active than last year, which is encouraging, and we saw the benefit of this in our LED project install businesses. As I mentioned earlier, we estimate that our like-for-like sales decline absent customer destocking, in other words, the decline in end user demand for our products, was about 2.5%. This means end user demand for our products has broadly evolved in line with the wider market over the last 12 months.

Taking a longer-term perspective, we believe we have increased our share of the market during COVID, i.e., since the first half of 2019 for two reasons. Firstly, we have added revenue and gained share by recommencing our M&A strategy. Secondly, on the previous page, you may have noticed that our sales have grown by 12.8% on a like-for-like basis since 2019, and this is despite a strong temporary headwind from customer destocking right now. Were it not for that, we believe we would have grown by 21% over the same time period, which we believe is stronger than the market. Okay, moving on to slide 10. This slide mirrors the analysis provided earlier for revenue. In the top chart, you can see we experienced a GBP 6.1 million like-for-like reduction in operating profit.

We believe all of this was attributable to customer stock changes. Indeed, we estimate that if our demand had mirrored end user demand, i.e., without disturbance from customer stock changes, our profits would have actually grown slightly year on year. This is thanks to the progressive recovery of input cost inflation, which I will talk more about in a moment. Customer stock changes had a significant impact on both revenue and profit. This is because they largely involve the same high margin wiring accessory product category that I referenced earlier. As you can see in the bottom chart, the group has delivered significant like-for-like profit growth during the pandemic. Again, this is despite the temporary headwind we are facing right now from customer destocking. Profit will therefore benefit when destocking inevitably comes to an end.

Okay, slide 11 provides an update on an old favorite, namely input cost inflation. My last update on this was back in March. At that time, I said input cost inflation and currency movements combined, and those that arose during the pandemic, were on course to add GBP 25 million to our annual cost base. The good news is that inflation is now moving in our favor overall, but clearly the situation is quite fast-moving. My latest estimate is that inflation will now add GBP 21.5 million to our annual cost base, GBP 3.5 million less than before. To be clear, this is due to reductions in price, not volume. Our rate of spend has obviously slowed this year as the business has slowed, but this is not a factor in this analysis.

For this purpose, I have kept activity levels constant throughout. Up until this year, the impact of cost inflation had largely been confined to the cost of product. We are about to see it expand into the cost of labor and services, i.e., overheads. It's very difficult to say at this stage what the cost of this will be. In my latest inflation estimate that you can see at the top of the page there, I have shown what I think is a fairly conservative view, namely a GBP 3.2 million or 7% increase in our overhead base, excluding depreciation. We will obviously do all we can to minimize that while retaining the talent we need in the business.

The good news here is that we have the selling prices in the market that can accommodate this amount of inflation in aggregate, as the bottom charts attempt to show. Looking at the bottom right-hand chart, the selling price increases we have in place will generate approximately GBP 22.5 million of extra annual income. These prices are in the market today with only a small annualization benefit to come in 2023. Comparing to the left-hand chart, GBP 22.5 million of extra income is GBP 1 million more than the total annual inflationary bill that we expect, providing some room for maneuver as inflation evolves. While selling price increases and cost inflation are therefore fairly well-balanced in total, the bottom charts also show the lag we have seen between experiencing the cost inflation and passing it through.

To expand on that, up until the end of 2021, our annual cost base had increased by GBP 16.5 million, as you can see in the dark green. GBP 7 million of this have been offset by selling price increases, meaning the cost inflation had reduced our annual profit by just under GBP 10 million up until that point. Now, this is a big number, which reflects quite how unusually sharp and widespread the inflationary wave was. The good news is that the sales prices have now broadly caught up with inflation, as we said that they would. In 2022, we will have reversed the GBP 10 million profit headwind, and therefore insulated our gross profit from inflationary forces.

This catch up in the recovery of input cost inflation has helped with our underlying profit progression in the period. It's difficult to say what happens next. If aggregate inflation impacting us continues to reverse, we are likely to see the same lag effect in reverse, i.e., with cost deflation leading selling price deflation, perhaps giving us a temporary profit boost in the future. Okay, finishing up on the non-numbers. Slide 12 summarizes our working capital, cash flow, and debt performance. As you can see in the top left, supplier delivery lead times in the first half were actually longer than they were on average in 2021, but not actually any worse than they were at the very end of last year. In fact, if anything, we have seen lead time shorten as 2022 has progressed. Port and container congestion is much less of a problem.

We did keep inventory cover high in early 2022, but supply chain normalization now gives us the opportunity to bring it down, and we are targeting a GBP 10 million reduction in inventory over the second half. The chart in the bottom left shows our historic free cash flow generation by half. Cash generation is naturally weighted towards H2 in this business, so H1 is never really a high point, but H1 2022 was obviously not our best, to be honest, due to keeping inventory high. This should turn around as we get into the second half. Our borrowing and debt leverage increased in the half. We did make fairly large tax and dividend payments against strong prior year earnings in the period. Plus, of course, we completed the acquisition of Sync EV.

I have every confidence that net debt will reduce in H2 as inventory reduces and cash flows benefit from our improved gross margins. Overall, we have a healthy balance sheet with ample committed facility headroom and leverage in the middle of our targeted range of 1x-2x EBITDA. We are prepared for any macro headwinds that may come our way. With that, I'll hand you back to John to talk through our strategy, business review, and outlook.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Thank you, Matt, very much. As Matt has said, we don't take a great deal of pleasure in the results of last year, but last year was an exceptional period, and we do need to keep our eye on the bigger picture. We continue to make excellent progress in many areas of the business, which I will explain now. It is testament that this improvement has also come through in the financial performance against the period before the pandemic. We are confident that we have the right business model and the strategy to improve our performance once the macroeconomic environment becomes easier. Slide 15. Looking at some of the longer term drivers of our markets and why they continue to grow faster than the overall market. Every two years, there are new wiring accessory regulations.

The regulatory change has driven more demanding products which have higher sales prices and is an ongoing upgrade of the systems in people's houses. Investment in new technology is an area where traditionally we have been at the forefront of innovation. There's an example we give here of a plastic socket that we used to sell for about GBP 1, and now a USB socket that we sell for about GBP 8. As we sell a huge amount of sockets, this obviously makes a big difference. Year- on- year, our customers are expecting more sophisticated products with higher selling prices. In overall investment in the housing stock over the last 20-odd years, U.K. residential RMI spending has been north of 4%. There are over 4 million homes in the U.K. which require significant further investment.

We have an aging housing stock, which means that ongoing investment will help our business. Finally, the climate emergency. SyncEV is an excellent acquisition for us, but it is just one area where electrification of transport and heating is going to drive more innovation in the home. We, as market leaders in residential electrical products, are extremely well-placed to take advantage of this. On to slide 16. We have made, as we said, excellent progress against the period before the pandemic. We have consistently outgrown the market. We have grown by approximately 29%, and the market has only grown by about 15%. We've won significant new business, and we've also acquired some excellent new opportunities.

I have spoken about the SyncEV acquisition, and I'll speak more about it later, but we believe that over time, this should become a huge opportunity for us and a major driver of our growth. We've also become a much more diversified business. As you can see from the percentages in the table in the top right-hand side, our retail and consumer exposure has reduced, and our exposure to the professional contractor channel has increased. This we have done through M&A, but we've also been targeting that within our business channels. We've also exited underperforming start-up businesses in France and Germany, which has allowed us to deploy more capital and resources into those businesses of ours which are performing well. This has improved our overall operating margin considerably. On to slide 17. Some examples here of our customer-focused innovation.

We are constantly investing in our product range. We have always led the market in terms of innovation, and we are also now doing that in the businesses which we have acquired. Kingfisher Lighting that we bought in 2017, we have invested a lot in the product range and the business, this year has grown its turnover by approximately 40%. We will do the same with the DW Windsor business that we have acquired, and we are confident that that will prove to be a very successful acquisition for us. Our most exciting new category is EV charging, which we entered earlier this year. We have launched lots of new products and have a very strong pipeline of new launches for the rest of this year and into next year.

Other areas of progress, we have invested a lot in the training, the Luceco Academy, where we are trying to get our brands to be more accepted by the new generation of electricians who are coming through. We have invested a lot of time and resource in understanding our impact on the climate. We are now operationally carbon neutral, and we have the lowest carbon intensity in our sector, as you can see from the graph in the top right-hand side. We have joined the Science Based Targets initiative, so there will be much more about this in our future annual reports. We've also been investing a lot in our employees. We have a 91% employee satisfaction in a recent survey, and we've invested a huge amount of time and effort in ongoing training of our workforce.

I'll now just speak a little bit about the two acquisitions that we made in the period. On slide 19, DW Windsor is a legacy lighting outdoor specialist that we acquired in October last year. It has a 14% market share of a GBP 300 million market. It's highly complementary with our Kingfisher business. We paid about 7x EBITDA for the business, which we felt was an excellent value. The performance this year has been slightly weaker than we would hoped, mainly because of some of the longer-term contracts have affected their gross margin. However, as we have been integrating the business with the group and making use of the group's resources and other manufacturing operations, we are confident that the business will have an excellent future.

It's an extremely high-quality legacy brand and has an excellent team within it. We have restructured the leadership, and as I say, we are working along with integrating it in to the group's overall sourcing structure. We believe that this business has significant long-term potential. Over to the next slide. SyncEV, a business that we acquired a 20% stake last August, and then we completed the 80% acquisition earlier on this year in March. It designs and manufactures EV charge points, and at the time that we purchased it had approximately a 2% market share of a GBP 150 million market, but a market which is growing extremely quickly. We believe up to GBP 500 million by 2025. We paid approximately GBP 10 million for this business.

Last year it had revenues of approximately GBP 3 million and operating profit of approximately 10%. However, this year we believe it will have sales of approximately GBP 7 million, and we would hope to have in-house sales of GBP 15 million next year. In August, we turned over GBP 800,000. As you can see, the business is growing extremely quickly and has been well integrated into the overall group. I'll now speak about the outlook, but on slide 23, I'll firstly look at some of the market trends that are affecting our business. Residential DIY, which is approximately 30% of the group, as we know, was extremely strong in the pandemic. There was a pull forward of demand as people working from home invested more in the housing stock.

This is the area which we are now seeing the most weakness. Housing transactions are beginning to fall, and the Barclaycard consumer spend report that we look at is showing a significant reduction in spending versus six months ago. On the residential RMI side, through the professional channel, this is weakening, but it is still well ahead of 2019. This may be an area where we see further weakness in future. However, on the non-residential side, the indicators are actually quite strong. The overall construction output before the pandemic is up more than 50%, and this is a sector of the market where we have an increasing presence. The outlook for the rest of this year, as we have said, is in line with the market expectations.

Trading in the second half so far has been also in line, as we were expecting, some slowdown in the DIY market. However, as I say, the professional activity has remained strong. Our gross margin will be significantly higher in the second half than it was in the first half. An increasing contribution from the EV charger business, which has a very high operating margin, will mean the overall group performance is considerably ahead of 2019. We therefore expect our full year earnings to be in line with current market expectations. We believe that, you know, this shows that we have a strong business with significant long-term growth prospects. The fact that we are performing weaker than an extraordinary performance last year, you know, does not mean that our long-term growth story is in any way impacted.

With that, I will hand over to any questions.

Operator

Thank you, sir. If you would like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star one on your telephone keypad. Using a speaker phone, please make sure your mute function is turned off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. Again, press star one to ask an audio question. We'll pause for just a moment to allow everyone an opportunity to signal. We will now take our first question from Charlie Campbell from Liberum. Please go ahead.

Charlie Campbell
Investment Analyst, Liberum

Good morning. I'm sorry, I think I've typed this in the Q&A box as well, so please ignore that. Just a couple of questions from me if I can. On the EV charger business, you talked about a market share of 2% at the moment. Do you think you can grow that towards the 10% group market share? Would you need to widen the product mix to do that, or is that sort of, you know, a possible or plausible medium to longer term objective?

Secondly, you know, really interested to hear more about kind of DW Windsor and Kingfisher Lighting, and just wondered if you disclose order books for those at all and, it may even if not numbers, just sort of, you know, how they compare with a year ago. Just be interested to hear that, and what kind of visibility you have in the pipelines there. Thank you very much.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Thanks, Charlie. The GBP 500 million market opportunity that we talk about is in the residential EV space. Basically every home with off-street parking will have one or two EV chargers. In terms of product development, there's a little bit of work we need to do, and there's a lot of other areas that we could invest in. More sort of, you know, on street sort of commercial type, you know, car parks, et cetera. Our primary focus so far has been on the residential space. Can we get a 10% market share in that space? Well, we have a close to 20% market share in electrical sockets which are sold into the residential space.

We have, you know, thousands of electrical distribution branches of wholesalers and/or hybrids, the likes of Screwfix, who are selling sockets into U.K. residential. We have tens of thousands of contractors who are installing our products every day. Therefore, we would absolutely hope to be able to take a significant share. Our brand, our BG brand is extremely well-recognized, is well-respected and well-trusted. We have an ability with our own manufacturing in China to make these products at the right price. As I say, we have the best distribution in the country into that electrical distribution channel. We believe this EV charger will become a much more sort of normalized product, you know, like a USB socket. Okay, it's a more high-powered socket, but it is just a socket, ultimately.

We think we should be able to take a very significant share of the residential market. If we can also have an activity in the more commercialized end of the market, then that would be incremental. This product also, of course, has opportunities in our international businesses. As you know, we have businesses outside of the U.K. Where we can also sell this product. Yeah, I think it's a big opportunity for us. In terms of Kingfisher and DW Windsor, particularly you asked about order books. Yeah, the Kingfisher order book is at record levels. Their turnover this year I think will be north of 40% up on last year. When we bought it in 2011, it turned over GBP 11.7 million. This year it'll turn over, I think, GBP 17.5 million.

Its operating profit will go from about GBP 1.2 million when we bought it, up to almost double that this year. That has been an extremely successful acquisition. DW Windsor revenue this year will be flattish on last year. Gross margin will be down a bit because of some long-term large contracts that they got caught into just before the inflationary wave hit, particularly things like aluminum, the cost of which has more than doubled. That has impacted their gross margin. In terms of order book, it's where we'd like it to be. I mean, they need to win some big tenders, and that's a rolling process. We are involved in a lot of conversations which could result in some very large tenders for next year.

Hopefully that answers your questions on both those businesses.

Charlie Campbell
Investment Analyst, Liberum

Yeah. Thank you very much. Thank you.

Operator

As a reminder to ask a telephone question, please signal by pressing star one. We will now take our next question from Kevin Fogarty from Numis. Please go ahead.

Kevin Fogarty
Director of Equity Research, Numis

Morning, gents. Thanks for taking the time to take my questions. If I could start with two. Matt, just on your estimate of the GBP 9.5 million of sort of cost headwinds that you need to sort of catch up on, i.e., you know, following the sort of price increases. Could you just talk about the rate at which you think that might unwind? I mean, is that a simplistic kinda 12-month period? Or, have the pace at which the price increases have been put through, does that sort of suggest, you know, that cost headwind unwinds at a slightly different rate over the next couple of quarters? It's just that would be useful to have a bit of clarity on that one.

Just sort of thinking about the EV opportunity again, just sort of going back to that. I just wondered what else kinda needs to be done in terms of channels to market in order to commercialize this technology and sorta capitalize on your ambitions for the group. I appreciate that it's kind of small relative to the overall group, but I just wondered if you could share with us, you know, how you'd expect that to change as we move forward, perhaps as we get into 2023, you know, given your ambitions for that business and the end markets it may ultimately address.

Matthew Webb
CFO, Luceco

Let me just take the first of those, Kevin. Thanks for those. Yeah. Just to be clear, you know what I said. What I said was, by the end of this year, the cumulative benefit that we will have had from selling price increases will equal the cumulative effects of cost inflation. It all becomes balanced out. In terms of the phasing of that and the phasing of the GBP 9.5 million catch-up required to get to that point, broadly speaking, I would say we'd have had about 1/3 of that benefit in the first half and 2/3 in the second half. This is one of the reasons why our exit rates of gross margin is stronger than what we had in H1.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

You know, this is the reason why we'll see the gross margin go from 34%- 37% half over half. Hopefully that answers your question. Just to be clear, there's nothing more that we need to do for this to happen. This is just gonna be the annualization, if you like, of selling price increases that are already in and accepted by the market.

Kevin Fogarty
Director of Equity Research, Numis

Okay.

Matthew Webb
CFO, Luceco

Sure.

Kevin Fogarty
Director of Equity Research, Numis

Fine.

Matthew Webb
CFO, Luceco

No, go on, Kevin. I was gonna say, I'll take the EV question, but if you've got more on cost, then ask away.

Kevin Fogarty
Director of Equity Research, Numis

Yeah, I just wonder, you know, you've given us some sort of good granularity in terms of some of the deflationary impacts as well. You know, I just wonder, are you sort of comfortable you've sort of captured all the potential sort of cost categories as you head into 2023? Appreciate, you know, you believe they're sort of covered by recent price increases, but just wondered, are there any sort of outliers we should think about, that may kind of present some cost risks in 2023 as you sit here today?

Matthew Webb
CFO, Luceco

It's a weird and wonderful world, Kevin. Who knows what's gonna happen next. I feel confident being, you know, the right way round in terms of the balance. I've got more selling price increases than I've got cost inflation. It gives me a bit of wiggle room. I suppose the one that we didn't talk about, and is obviously one that's on everyone's lips at the moment, is energy. It's not a big number for us, and of course, if the world goes absolutely crazy, I guess it could become a bigger number. Perhaps I should just sort of talk about energy just for the benefit of everyone on the call. I mean, we spend about GBP 1 million a year on electricity and gas.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

90% of that is electricity, not gas, so that's the right way around, if you ask me. About half of it is on fixed price contracts that go out until the end of 2024. The other half is variable. The part that's variable is nearly all in China rather than in the U.K. China, I won't say it's immune from the kind of energy price inflation cycle, but it's a lot less exposed than the U.K. is. We will see some inflation from energy. It's not a first-order issue for us, not in the same way that commodities and freight and currency are.

Kevin Fogarty
Director of Equity Research, Numis

Great. That's helpful.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Okay.

Kevin Fogarty
Director of Equity Research, Numis

Thank you.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Shall I try and give a bit more color on EV?

Kevin Fogarty
Director of Equity Research, Numis

Great.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

As I said, we did GBP 800,000 worth of EV in August. Our run rate is improving significantly. I mean, we have what we need now to sell into residential domestic distributors. We obviously have a sales team who are selling other sockets through electrical distribution into contractors, which get installed in people's homes. We have a very successful business doing that, and we deal with all the big customers, and we have a very good commercial team who are well experienced at that. That particular part of the market, you know, we've got well covered. I mean, there are other products we can add. When you install an EV charger, you probably have to do something with your circuit protection devices.

That's a spin-off of extra revenue. We're launching cables, we're launching controls so that you can integrate it with your solar panels and your hot water systems. So it's not just the charger. There is a load of other devices and peripherals that sit around it, which we're also gonna be offering. We're launching a three-phase product. I mean, most residential houses don't require three-phase, but about 10% do, and we'll be launching that product in Q1 next year. You know, we think we can have a very successful business in that part of the market. What we then have an opportunity to do is to expand the product range using the expertise that we have now and enter other parts of the market. You know, there's a commercial opportunity.

Every hotel is gonna have a bank of EV chargers. I guess a lot of workplaces are gonna have charging. I mean, anywhere where a car is parked for any length of time is, in the future, gonna have a bank of EV chargers, probably every parking spot, in fact. Because as you know, by 2030, it's only electric cars are allowed to be sold. There's a huge market for those sort of semi-public areas. And then there's the sort of fleet opportunity as well. We've got a fleet contract or two, but we haven't yet got the. We need a slightly different product, slightly higher power to address some of these more commercial markets, but we're obviously working on that now.

We'll need to recruit a sales team to address those other parts of the market, for example, car OEMs. You know, when you buy a car, you often get offered an EV charger by, you know, by the car OEM, i.e. BMW, Audi or the car dealership. We don't yet have customers in that space. There's a lot of work to do to expand the commercial activity from where we are now. Where we are now is also significant. You know, we've got a good business, but yeah, we can grow it a lot further. As I said earlier, there's the international opportunity. We have distribution in Mexico, we have distribution in Spain and France, we have distribution in the Middle East, we have distribution in Asia.

We know we serve hundreds of countries globally, and I think we can have an international business on EV charging as well.

Kevin Fogarty
Director of Equity Research, Numis

Great. That's really helpful. Thanks a lot. Thank you.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Well, just in terms of aspirations, I mean, you know, I mean, I think I said earlier I'd hope the EV category, you know, could double next year to about GBP 15 million. It doubled this year on last year, if you take the pro forma numbers of what SyncEV was doing. And if we can double it every year for the next, you know, five years, it becomes a very decent business. That would be the aspiration.

Kevin Fogarty
Director of Equity Research, Numis

Sure. Very helpful. Thanks a lot.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Thanks, Kevin.

Operator

There appears to be no further questions. I want to turn it over for web questions. Thank you.

Moderator

Thank you. Our first question submitted from the webcast is, what is the likelihood of inventory write-downs? Have the distributors been discounting their excess stock? If so, what are the implications?

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Um-

Matthew Webb
CFO, Luceco

Yeah. Should I do the inventory write-down, John?

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Yeah, sure.

Matthew Webb
CFO, Luceco

No, I don't believe that high inventory in this case will lead to inventory write-downs. Well, I mean, if you look at our product category, product changes are relatively slow. Obsolescence is, you know, not as risky as what you might find in other sectors. Just because you might have high inventory doesn't mean to say that somehow you're sitting on a loss. Actually, to be honest, if you look at the inventory that we have that's that we want to try to eliminate, it's actually just too much good inventory rather than too much bad inventory. I don't have concerns about write-downs. Also, to be honest, our balance sheet is appropriately provided for inventory losses. I don't have a concern about that.

John, do you wanna deal with the?

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

I mean, a different angle to that question is whether our customers are gonna write down inventory and whether that

will have an effect on the market price. We've not seen that happen. I mean, you know, there may be some promotional activity to clear inventory, but I don't envisage that being significant. I mean, they have reduced their inventory quite a lot this year. You know, it's much easier for them to reduce their inventory by simply not buying stock. That doesn't impact their margin. It obviously impacts us a lot, which is what we're experiencing now. That's the way they will reduce their stock normally in our category, rather than just by discounting.

Moderator

Thank you. Our next question is there a risk of more widespread destocking beyond the large customer frequently cited?

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Well, not really, because most customers buy on a very short lead time. The reason our business is particularly vulnerable to this overstocking, destocking is because our customers are buying effectively on a six-month lead time. In the pandemic, that lead time went up to you know nine months. Because they're buying so far out, you know, variation of demand takes a long time to adjust, and therefore they have to move their purchasing. Most customers buy on a lead time of less than one week, so they can adjust very quickly to movements in demand. Sure, I mean, if demand weakens significantly going forward, customers will hold their stock.

It's the, you know, the telegraphed effect of, you know, long lead times does not mean that it's a particularly significant movement. Matt, do you wanna add to that? I'm not sure I answered that.

Matthew Webb
CFO, Luceco

No, that's that. I think the question was asking both our inventory and the supply chain inventory, and I think we've covered both angles of it.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

I mean, smaller customers have destocked as well as larger customers, but that destocking, you know, happens within weeks.

Matthew Webb
CFO, Luceco

Yeah.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

It doesn't happen over an extended period of time.

Moderator

Okay, our next question. You talk about further destocking impact. Can you quantify this? Are you still winning market share? Excluding destocking numbers appear to be better than those being reported by Kingfisher/Screwfix, for instance. Can you remind us how the currencies work for you, given the dollar to pound rate at present? Thank you.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Yeah. I mean, how much destocking there is into next year obviously depends on how quickly they destock between now and the end of this year. We are expecting somewhere between GBP 5 million-GBP 10 million of further destocking next year. Matt, I'll let you answer currencies.

Matthew Webb
CFO, Luceco

Just on the destocking. GBP 7 million impact in H1. We're calling out another GBP 7 million destocking in H2, and as John says, GBP 5 million-GBP 10 million next year, based on the visibility that we have of our customers' demand. In terms of currency, I mean, overall currency is actually moving in our favor. I mean, for us, it's all really about the strength of the U.S. dollar versus the RMB. Half of our revenue is sold in dollars, particularly to the large retail and hybrid customers, and obviously we buy nearly everything that we sell from China. A year ago, that was sort of down towards the, you know, 6 RMB to the dollar.

It's now 7 RMB to the dollar. We have hedging in place to sort of delay the benefit, if you like. In the end, there's no question that weak RMB, strong dollar, you know, in the end is good for us.

Moderator

Great. Our final question. Will you be leveraging the existing brands and Chinese factory to enter the fast-growing solar panels/inverters or heat pump markets?

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Well, that's an interesting question. Solar panel manufacturing is a huge operation. I've been to some factories in China where they do it. It is not something that we could embark upon in our factory. Inverters, yes, that is something that we could look at and we are looking at whether we would manufacture them ourselves. I mean, batteries, inverters, solar, EV, they all sort of go together in the whole sort of off-grid residential move. Heat pumps are generally installed by plumbers who are not our customer base. I think it's unlikely that we would manufacture heat pumps. I couldn't rule out that we wouldn't wanna enter the market, though, at some point in the future.

There's a whole load, as I said earlier, of accessories and peripheries around this electrification of heating and of transport. Even if we don't actually sell the solar panels or manufacture the solar panels, we can get involved in the activity, you know, via, you know, batteries. Again, we wouldn't manufacture batteries, but we could distribute them. Inverters, cables, connectors, and upgrade to circuit protection, which is almost certainly required for these kind of installations. It's an opportunity for us, but no, we wouldn't manufacture solar panels, to answer your question directly.

Matthew Webb
CFO, Luceco

I just add one thing to that. John just mentioned the consumer units or fuse boards. I mean, in John's slides, he highlighted the regulatory change that has over time driven up the value and complexity of consumer units, fuse boards. I mean, that's a key product category for us. I think in the new world of sort of home electrical generation, that is likely to continue. The consumer unit might be at the center of the home, regulating how electricity comes in from the grid, goes to your car, goes to your home battery, comes from your solar panels. I can see the sort of consumer unit complexity and value increasing over time as homes kinda convert to green energy, and that's obviously a great thing for us.

Moderator

Thank you. There are no further questions online, so I'd like to hand back to you, John, for any additional closing remarks.

John Hornby
CEO, Luceco

Well, thank you very much. You know, just as I said before, you know, disappointing not to be able to repeat the extraordinary performance of last year, but that was an extraordinary time, extraordinary demand, as it turns out, extraordinary overstocking. You know, we firmly believe that if you compare our business to, you know, the pre-pandemic, you can see that, you know, considerable progress has been made both financially, operationally, and strategically. We remain extremely confident that we are doing the right thing. We are investing in the right areas. We have the right products. We have the right brands. We have the right astute team. The future for us, you know, will be excellent. Thank you very much.

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