Good morning, everyone, and welcome to this presentation of Scandi Standard's result for Q1 2024. You can move to the next slide, please. My name is Jonas Tunestål, and I'm the CEO and Managing Director of Scandi Standard. With me, I have Fredrik Sylwan, our CFO, and I'm pleased to have him by my side today. I'm also glad to report a significant volume and profit growth within the quarter. Next slide, please. While the first quarter of 2023 was dominated by substantial price hikes for input goods, energy, and transportation costs, market conditions have now returned to more normal levels. The situation has enabled price reductions that has benefited consumers in parallel with stimulated demand for our products. So overall, this has resulted in a significant volume and earning growth, even though net sales were lower for the group.
W e have increased the volumes with 8% in the quarter. We have increased our EBIT with 32%, and that is SEK 122 million compared to SEK 93 million last year, and that its margin improved from 2.9% to 3.9% in the quarter. The improvement was driven by a strong quarter in Ready-to-Cook, and Ready-to-Eat and Ingredients was, however, weaker, as expected. We have a strong balance sheet, however, the cash flow was impacted by timing effects, as explained in the last quarter, and we propose a dividend of SEK 2.30 compared to SEK 1.50 last year, and the dividend will be paid in two equal installments. N ext slide, please.
We are proud to have passed a successful turnaround process and recovered our earnings after a tough period for Scandi Standard, and we have taken action as forceful volume contractions to support required price increases. A new course implemented in Ready-to-Cook Denmark, and our balance sheet strengthened through capital discipline and divestments. With recovered earnings and a stronger balance sheet, we have now entered the next stage in our journey, and we see a strong demand and has recently allowed us to ramp up a volume of 8%. The next slide, please. We have seen a long period of sharply increase in input cost, which has necessitated radical price increases to consumers. Market conditions have now started to be more normalized.
Key input costs are trending downwards, and as presented on the first page, input cost has a link to our top line. Although we see calmer waters now, we have, however, we need to be prepared for further volatility and uncertainty. The short production cycle, compared to other proteins, enable us to be more agile in our supply chain. And when we look at other costs, as packaging and energy, we see that those costs are at a more stable level, and we are hedging a major part of our electricity exposure. Next slide, please. Price has always been important for customers, and that focus has increased even more in the present inflationary environment.
Chicken is affordable in all segments, from high-end to low-end segments, and fillet, which is our high-end cut, is even competitive in the lower-end segments. W e see further opportunities to drive more value out of the chicken due to its affordability. N ext slide, please. T his slide, I've shown it a couple of times, reminds you on our strong market positions in all our five home markets and the countries that are highly consolidated. T hese markets have large entry barriers, and they can individually be regarded as semi-closed markets due to the strong consumer preference for domestic produce. D ue to our strong market position, our own supply decisions have a meaningful impact on market balance, and that has helped us in the recovery process from inflation. Next slide, please. A s you can see on this slide, we're expecting strong growth in consumption.
We have had 34% growth in poultry in the period from 2010 to 2023, and Rabobank they are expecting 13% growth until 2030. Next slide, please. As we have explained in detail during the Capital Market Day, drivers for this growth are these three areas. It is responsible, safe, and nutritious, it's convenient, versatile, and tasteful, and it is affordable because it's sustainable. It's three important areas to drive our growth. Next slide, please. Then we're looking to Ready-to-Cook, and this table shows the reconciliation of our segments. We see strong positive contribution in Ready-to-Cook and a decline in Ready-to-Eat and others, as expected in Q1 2023. We also want to remind you that the category Other includes our ingredients business and our corporate costs. Next slide, please.
Here we're looking into our Ready-to-Cook segment. We have an increase in net sales of 3% and a volume growth of 8%, and the difference is driven by lower input costs and change in breed in Denmark. We present an EBIT of SEK 96 million, compared to SEK 31 million last year, first quarter last year. It is a strong improvement, driven by turnaround measures and increase in demand in several markets. We also see improvement in our animal welfare metrics, mainly driven by Ireland, and that is mainly improvement in Footpad scores and lower antibiotic use. We also have a strong focus on our LTI performance and our continuous improvement in that area. The next slide, please. Here we can see it over time.
We see a solid recovery in our Ready-to-Cook, with an EBIT per kilo of 1.37, compared to 0.47 krona per kilo last year. Net sales per kilo is slightly down due to its link to input cost. Lower input cost converts into more attractive consumer pricing, and we see a volume growth in this quarter of 8%. However, Sweden is still operating at 85% of historical volume level. Although we see a great improvement, we have a long way to go, which is reflected in our ambitious financial targets. The next slide, please. Here we move into export. We have seen a 4% decrease in export prices versus Q1, 2023. We focus on building more solid export business with strategic international retail and food service customers.
The aim is to be less exposed to the commodity market, which has and will have a positive impact on our export business. We're also focusing on broaden our export permits to the most attractive export markets in order to get more value out of every bird. One achievement in the quarter is that Ireland has granted export permission to South Africa. When we look at the export prices, we see this stabilization in the export prices, even though the uncertainty is still high due to macro factors. Next slide, please. Yeah, on this slide, you can see the channel development in more detail. Through these details, you can notice the increase in all channels in the quarter, which is driven mainly by volume.
We have seen a strong demand growth in several of our markets in the quarter, and in particular, Finland has a fantastic growth at the moment. N ext slide, please. N ow we move into Ready-to-Eat. A s explained the last quarter and quarter before, we have a temporary reduced activity level. The net sales are down 22%, and we present an EBIT of SEK 25 million, compared to SEK 45 million last year, and that is due to loss of contract in Central Europe. And the margin drop is driven by plant utilization, as communicated last quarter. V olume growth compared to Q4 is up when we hit the bottom in Q4. We do see adverse development in lost time injuries, and we have made corrective actions taken to prevent reoccurrence and continuous work to ensure preventive measures.
Move into next slide, please. W e continue to rebuild our Ready-to-Eat order book after the loss of breaded contract. The higher volume and low margin business is phased out now, and volume and EBIT has bottomed out in Q4, 2023. The lost business have made room for new opportunities with a more long-term, diversified, and profitable portfolio, and we have a good traction in replacing lost business. Retail sales is the main contributor in the quarter, and we have historically seen a strong but uneven demand, and we expect continuous growth over time. G rowth in this segment, and it is important to say that that comes in sequences, and we have a lot of potential customers in the pipeline.
N ow we're using this period of lower utilization to upgrade and maintenance to meet higher standards and prepare for the future expansion. So, Ready-to-Eat is an important cornerstone in our strategy to reach our financial target, and we're expecting gradual EBIT improvement quarter- by- quarter. Next slide, please. H ere you can see it in figures, and it is, of course, very encouraging to see that the continuous growth in retail. However, the development in the food service channel is declining due to the reasons mentioned in the former slide. Growth in this segment is and will be a priority for me in the coming years. We are confident that we will replace the lost volumes with other more profitable volumes in the coming year.
We've already slowly started to fill up with new orders, and we'll continue to do that in the coming periods. Ready-to-Eat will be an important long-term tool in our aim to developing our EBIT per kilo. That is, i.e., increasing the value of our protein. Next slide, please. I'm not very concerned about recovering the recent lost volumes in the coming period. We have historically seen a strong but uneven demand, and we expect to continue growth over time. Growth in this segment, as I stated on the last slide, comes in sequences, and the trends are particularly strong for convenience products. We have these two main type of businesses. It is the international breaded business, where we have our Farre factory, and then we have our integrated local business in Sweden, Norway, and now also Finland.
Our ready-to-eat business yields a significantly higher return on capital employed compared to Ready-to-Cook. I also want to highlight the strong organic growth in this segment over the years, and that is including the 40% growth in 2023. With that, I hand over to Fredrik for a more deep dive in the financials.
Great. Many thanks, Jonas. Good morning, everyone. Next slide, please. As Jonas has mentioned, Q1 was strong. It was actually our strongest first quarter ever, with improved profitability and strength in margin. Sales was lower than previous year, which was expected, and the main drivers are the RTE contract phased out during last year. Ingredients had high prices previous year, and they are now more normalized, and lower input costs that has benefited our consumers. This was partly offset by the very strong RTC performance. EBIT increased with 32% to SEK 122 million, and the EBIT margin strengthened with 100 basis points to 3.9%. Our finance costs have increased compared to previous year, and that increase is mainly attributed to higher interest rates, partly offset by reduced net interest-bearing debt.
Our net net income was SEK 70 million in the first quarter, which is an increase of 59%. Despite some challenges in sales, our feed efficiency remains stable at a strong level. Feed efficiency is measured as kilos of feed needed per 1 kilo live weight, where chicken has one of the lowest levels for animal proteins. We're focusing heavily on employee safety and are making progress rolling 12, but Q1 is higher than previous year. There are several ongoing initiatives to keep accidents to a minimum. Next slide, please. Our return on capital employed and return on equity continue the positive trend, and we have significantly improved versus previous year. We are now back to historic levels, and main drivers are increased profitability and more equity.
At the same time, our equity ratio has improved both versus the fourth quarter and previous year and is now just south of 37%. Next slide, please. Here we have our cash flow overview. As we said in the fourth quarter, net interest-bearing debt was impacted by exceptionally low working capital at year-end. In Q1, we had strong sales the week before Easter, resulting in higher accounts receivables. CapEx is significantly higher than previous year, supporting our journey for higher effectiveness and efficiency. I n the quarter, paid tax was positively impacted by a refund of preliminary corporate tax in Sweden. Overall, our net interest-bearing debt increased with SEK 138 million in the quarter, and leverage is now at 1.9, which is significantly lower than previous year, and also our target of 2.5.
It's the net interest-bearing debt was reduced with almost SEK 300 million versus Q1 last year, which is very positive. All in all, our financials are stable, which is giving us improved strategic flexibility going forward. Next slide, please. Our working capital is close to flat in the quarter, impacted mainly by accounts receivable. Inventory is slightly higher, and accounts payable, together with other, are in line with year-end. As previously announced, target level of working capital to sales, excluding financing items, remains around 6%, and we're currently in line with target. Focus going forward is to closely monitor development and optimize it. Next slide, please. This slide shows our inventory development, and you can see that it's under control.
This, of course, remains a clear focus area going forward, and we, for example, are working on optimizing the sales and operations planning to make sure we produce the right products and we use the export channel for surplus sales, not to interfere with domestic pricing. Next slide, please. CapEx for 2024 is expected to be around SEK 500 million, which is a substantial increase versus last year. This aims to support the journey to reach the recently revised targets, and the priorities are. The expansion of the RTE business in Norway to meet the increased demand with approximately 30% capacity enhancement. Also, to increase the deboning capacity in Ireland and Denmark, as well as Finland, to climb the value ladder. We also invest in product differentiation in Ireland, as well as increase efficiency with a new packaging line, for instance.
We also have our ERP implementation, where we successfully went live with the first country now just a couple of weeks ago. Also, in the beginning of this second quarter, we successfully concluded the acquisition of a lease production and packaging facility located in Norway. The asset was procured with a dual objective of safeguarding a critical strategic resource and enhancing our EBIT margin. The transaction was executed at the valuation of NOK 190 million . The interest rate on bank financing is approximately 5.5% per year, but if we add the IFRS interest components of leasing and factoring in vendor financing, paid financing cost is estimated to be around 8% of net interest-bearing debt. W e proposed to divide the dividend into two installments with separate ex-dates to balance our cash flow between the second and the third quarter.
Next slide, please, and back to you, Jonas.
Thank you, Fredrik. Next, I will talk a little bit about one of our cornerstone and our license to operate. There are three key areas when it comes to creating trust for what we do. It is responsible animal welfare, it is safety for our customers and consumers, and it is nutritious products. This has a close link to our sustainability scorecard. If we move to next slide, please. Here, I'm proud of the progress that we have made June 2023, including meaningful improvement in lost time injury frequency rates, antibiotic use, and our main animal welfare indicators, like footpad score. We see slightly higher LTIs in the first quarter compared to the first quarter last year, but we're putting a lot of efforts to reach our long-term target for 2024.
During 2024, we will continue to refine our roadmap to towards 2030, and including development of our climate transition plan, as well as implementing the EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive, and that is called CSRD. The implementation of CSRD will further strengthen the integration of sustainability in our strategy, value chain, and operations, and facilitate comparability and further transparency. I t is important for us to reach the standards and follow a structured way of working with sustainability. If we move into next slide, please. Here on this slide, you can see that our structured efforts is resulting in recognition in form of improved ESG ratings. So we have an A-minus in the CDP rating, an A-minus rating that only a few companies within the food industry have obtained.
It's actually only two companies in the Swedish food industry that have achieved that, and we are one of them. We also score high on other ESG ratings, for example, in Sustainalytics, where we are top 10 out of 360 companies in packaged goods, packaged food globally. W e are in, in our ESG work, focusing on the whole value chain, from farm to fork, with data collection, target setting, and reduction initiatives. M oving to next slide, please. F or the ones of you that have followed us for a while, you have seen these pillars before, and these are our four strategic pillars that will support us in achieving our goals.
It is to increase the value of our protein, ramp up efficiency, and all of this we need to do with sustainable, sustainable means in every step of the way, as one company, making us constantly better together. Better together, that is the belief and practice we strive for to make us more effective, successful, and impactful when we collaborate, work as a team, and leverage each other's strengths. It emphasizes the collective effort, shared goals, and team cooperation, and that leads to improved performance and outcomes. I f we move into next slide. Here we can see our financial goals, and we want to create a Scandi Standard to be proud of, trusted by everyone, and where people can develop. With this comes earnings, and with earnings, you earn your right to grow.
At the right-hand side, you can see our financial targets for 2027 and our sustainability targets for 2030. We are expecting strong growth over the coming years, and we set a target for 2027 of 5%-7% net sales growth. A s we presented before, we need to be aware of that we're coming from a high inflation with high feed costs, and that will affect the net sales for 2024. A s I mentioned before, our business has typically high exposure to cyclical raw material prices as feed. But due to our dynamic pricing model, with more than 80% of our sales linked, we have the ability to pass through feed costs.
I n 2024, we expect feed to come down, which will affect our 2024 sales number, but that will not affect our volume and EBIT per kilo expansion in 2024. In addition to this, we have the important supporting target of three, SEK 3 EBIT per kilo grill weight, and that we consider as one of the most valuable targets for us. We can move to next slide, please. On this slide, you can see the essence of our clear roadmap to achieve that SEK 3 per kilo. We see a large potential to climb the value ladder, and we also see a large potential to set up a better efficiency in our value chain. T hat's why we have stated these two headlines: climb the value ladder, where it is about to balance supply and demand in our fillets.
It is about value creation and move more into convenience. It is about differentiation and our branding opportunities, and it is to utilize all part of the bird, including ingredients. Then we also see large efficiency potential in the value chain, and that is optimized utilization of our sustainability metrics. It is better organizational performance and scalable platform, and a structured collaboration between our different markets. We see product standardization and optimization, and we see a supply chain standardization and digitalization because we see a more fragmented value chain today that we want to make more streamlined and take more efficiency out of it. I f we move into next slide, please. T o achieve our goals, we're building a robust vehicle to serve our home markets and beyond. W e are launching this SEK 2 billion investment program in the period.
The investment program aim is to support Ready- to- Cook investment, support the 2% increase in throughput in our plants, and to support better utilization of facilities. It is to support the ramp-up of our ingredients business, and it's also preparing for significant growth in our Ready- to- Eat segment. We have also earmarked investment of more than SEK 200 million for meeting our sustainability goals. As you all know, sustainability and efficiency is linked together. It's only different measures of how you can use resources in a more efficient way. I f we move into the last slide, and summary and outlook. In the quarter, we have seen a significant profit and margin expansion. We see encouraging demand. We're expecting continued profitable growth in Ready- to- Cook.
We have a strong and disciplined focus on replacement, or, new orders in Ready-to-Eat. We have a clear strategy to reach our long-term goals, and we see the large potential in climbing the value ladder. T hen we have our dividend proposal of SEK 2.3, compared to SEK 1.50 last year, and the dividend will be paid in two equal installments. So with that, I want to say, thank you and open up for questions.
If you'd like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad now. If you change your mind, please press star followed by two. When preparing to ask your question, please ensure your device is unmuted locally. We'll pause here briefly as questions are being registered. As a reminder, that's star one to ask a question. Our first question today comes from Daniel Schmidt from Danske Bank. Please go ahead.
Yes, good morning, guys. Hope you can hear me. Just a couple of questions from me then. And, starting with maybe the food service business, and I think it's quite clear that you're mentioning that you should see a gradual recovery and that you are, hopeful that you will be able to replace, the lost contract. C ould you give us any sort of timeline, on where you should or what we would, what we should expect?
What we have said is that we will gradually get back to it, where it will take a couple of quarters and a timing to next year until the factory is filled up. I t's more important for us to focus on getting the right orders and getting have a low complexity and drive better margins out of the business in total. I t's the importance for us is to find the right orders to fill up for building a long-term, diversified portfolio in that business. T hat is more important for us than actually achieve a certain volume in a quarter, but we see really good progress in it.
We have a lot of good discussions, a lot of orders that we are already achieved, and we have a clear plan on filling up our RT business. A s you see, as we said in the.
Okay.
Last quarter, we bottom out in Q4.
Yeah. The fact that the reported number is lower for Q1 versus Q4, is that price or is that seasonality or? When you look at food service in Ready-to-Eat.
Yeah, in Ready-to-Eat food service. Yeah, it is, it's more about that we have seen and growth in our retail segment where we have taken in new business in Ready-to-Eat. When you see food service, in general, we see actually a pretty okay strong demand in the food service sectors as well. T he numbers that you see there, and if you take away the big food service customer lost contract before, it is more seasonal when it changed. W e see a pretty strong food service market in the period and in the coming period.
Okay. But if you look back, it doesn't look like it's a lot of seasonality between Q1 and Q4, but maybe it has developed in that way.
It's, when you look into the historical volumes, the food service has been, as we presented before, on a few really big customers, with a more even flow. Now, we're filling up with a different kind of customers, but we don't see this big seasonality around, but there will be changes throughout the quarters, and especially now when we are filling up the factory.
Okay. But what you're saying is that the bottom was in Q4, and although the number for Q1 is lower than in Q4, the underlying trend is positive?
Yes.
Yeah. All right. T hen just moving on to Ready-to-Cook, you don't mention any sort of a specific number for the Danish business. You've done that before. Could you provide that, or could you say anything if it's now making profits, or where are we?
Yeah. What we did is, before we are reporting on total segments, and when we had this crisis, or the low numbers in EBIT in Ready-to-Cook Denmark, we presented that as a special note in our presentation. Now, when we have gone back to break even, we are not reporting on a country for country. But the progress is heading the way that we want and as we have predicted before.
Okay. D o you see sort of that business medium term being on average with the rest of the group, or is that still something that's gonna be slightly less profitable, although you've done quite a lot of improvements in the past year?
I think that, if we look into different countries, there will be different margins. W e see, and we will see an improvement in Denmark. We don't expect Denmark to reach the high margins in our group, but we're expecting the normalized margins. W e also, as we presented in the strategy plan, we see a strong integration between our Ready-to-Eat factory and our Ready-to-Cook factory, and actually utilize the best of the most value of our bird. W hen we are utilizing that, we can create a market in Denmark that is interested to be in for Scandi Standard. I t is a journey that we will move on.
We don't have expectation that it will reach the highest levels in margins in Scandi Standard, but a good profitable business.
Yeah. Yeah. Good. Just a question on export prices. Are export prices in general impacted by input costs, or is that just more sort of supply-demand driven pricing?
It is impacted in what you should call it. A logical way in feed costs. But at the moment, we see some constraints when it comes to broiler capacity, and that has also an impact on the sales prices. W e have seen them come down, but we are actually predicting a stable level in export prices going forward. W ith that said, I also mentioned that on the export slide, there are big uncertainty due to the macro factors that is hard to predict at the moment, due to war and what will happen with raw material and inflation and so on.
But when we look into the supply and demand, we actually see that is stabilizing in the European market. That's also impacting.
Yeah.
It's also impacting wherever there will be import restrictions or the level of import from Brazil, Thailand, and Ukraine into the European market.
Yeah. Okay, and just maybe just final question on the input costs and the feed prices have, of course, clearly come down over the past year, and you sound like you think that it's gonna continue to stay low or go even lower. And most of that is pass-through for you guys, but you do have the Irish business, right? Is that benefiting from lower feed prices?
It has, as mentioned, before, when we had this increase of feed pricing, we are hedged in that one. W e had a more flat curve than what we see on the spot prices. And of course, when the feed prices comes down, we see a more flat curve, a more slightly decline in there as well. But of course, it's beneficial for us when we can when the gap increases between the sales prices and and our biggest input costs. But we have, as presented before, we have 80% of our businesses is linked to a model where it's linked to the feed price.
O f course, that lowers our risk, but it's also creates less headroom for driving margins when the feed price falls.
I didn't hear the last part there, but you, you still have 20% that's not linked. So doesn't that mean that if feed prices come down, that's a positive?
Yeah, that's a positive.
Yeah.
T hat's actually what I'm saying. Most of it is linked, but of course.
Yeah.
T here's an effect when we see lower prices, and then we have the hedge that we're also already always do. So there are also an slightly delay on the effect.
Yeah.
Compared to spot prices.
Yeah. Okay. Thank you, guys.
Thank you.
For any further questions, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad now. It appears we have no further questions, so I'll hand back to the management team.
Thank you very much. Then, if there's no further question, I will thank you everyone for listening in to this session, and welcome to presented our Q1 results. So thank you, everyone, and goodbye.
Indeed. Many thanks.