Published August 25, 2009
Raffles Education full-year net profit dives 48% to $51m
By TEH SHI NING
RAFFLES Education Corp's net profit for the full year ended June 30 dropped by almost half due mainly to an impairment charge.
Net earnings dived 48.3 per cent to $51.1 million from $98.8 million in FY2008.
The year saw a $33.1 million impairment of its entire investment in associate Oriental Century Limited (OCL).
'The group has stopped equity accounting for the results of OCL in FY2009,' said Raffles Education.
But without this impairment, Raffles' net profit would still have fallen 14.8 per cent to $84.2 million.
Other factors causing the earnings fall include a $15.5 million increase in rental and personnel expenses due to investments in six new colleges in India, Indonesia and China, and a larger headcount after operations expanded.
Its tax expenses also rose $15.3 million, while finance costs rose $7.2 million and net bad debt expenses rose $3.3 million due to prudence.
Turnover had in fact risen 6.3 per cent to $202 million, from $190 million the previous year, due to an overall increase in student enrolment in the group's schools.
Raffles Education chairman and chief executive Chew Hua Seng said: 'Notwithstanding the one-off impairment allowance, the group has performed well and we continue to invest in growth.'
As part of its organic expansion plans, Raffles intends to open eight more colleges - three in Asia-Pacific and five in India - and to look for strategic acquisitions to develop the group's brand equity regionally.
Other growth drivers, the group says, include the development of its own proprietary courseware and Oriental University City, a self-contained campus in China's Hebei province providing education services to 14 colleges.
Following two placements during the year, the group's gearing ratio fell to 0.02 times this year, from 0.25 times last year.
Cash and cash equivalents as at June 30 totalled $115.3 million.
While earnings per share fell 49.9 per cent to 2.17 cents, the group's net asset value per share grew 25 per cent to 20.07 cents as at June 30.
The group has proposed a final tax-exempt dividend of one cent per share.
Raffles' shares closed half a cent lower at 59.5 cents each yesterday.