R.E.A. Holdings plc (“REA” or
the “company”) – Trading
update
REA, whose
principal business is the cultivation of oil palms in the province
of East Kalimantan in Indonesia and the production and sale of CPO
and CPKO, is pleased to announce a trading update for the year
ended 31 December 2024.
All terms in
this announcement are listed on the group’s website at:
www.rea.co.uk/about/glossary.
Agricultural operations
Key agricultural
statistics for the year to 31 December 2024 (with comparative
figures for 2023) were as follows:
|
2024
|
2023
|
Fresh Fruit
Bunch (“FFB”) harvested (tonnes):
|
|
|
Group
|
682,522
|
762,260
|
Third
party
|
210,594
|
231,823
|
Total
|
893,116
|
994,083
|
|
|
|
Production
(tonnes):
|
|
|
Total FFB
processed
|
857,575
|
949,701
|
FFB
sold
|
34,192
|
45,032
|
CPO
|
190,235
|
209,994
|
Palm
kernels
|
44,286
|
47,324
|
CPKO
|
18,086
|
19,393
|
|
|
|
Extraction rates
(per cent):
|
|
|
CPO
|
22.2
|
22.1
|
Palm
kernel
|
5.2
|
5.0
|
CPKO*
|
40.6
|
40.2
|
|
|
|
Rainfall
(mm):
|
|
|
Average across
the estates
|
2,707
|
3,225
|
*Based on kernels processed
Group FFB
production for 2024 fell some 10 per cent below production in 2023.
Albeit that crop levels were weighted to the second half of the
year, this weighting was less pronounced than usual with no
discernible peak period as has been typical in the latter months of
the year. The lower overall level of production and absence of a
peak period is attributed to climatic factors and is reported to
have been widespread across Indonesia. Additionally,
the group’s lower crop volumes reflected the reductions in
hectarage due to clearing of mature areas for replanting, as well
as various other adjustments.
Third party FFB
was similarly impacted by the climatic factors that reduced
production generally and, in turn, CPO production mirrored the drop
in total FFB processed.
The CPO
extraction rate for the year averaged 22.2 per cent, consistently
in the upper quartile when compared against local benchmarks. Oil
losses in the mills remain comfortably below industry
standards.
Under
experienced engineering management and with the benefit of recent
substantial investments, improvements in operating efficiency and
capacity utilisation in the group’s three mills were reflected in
increased average throughput per hour and a reduction in the number
of breakdowns and, therefore, reduced labour costs.
Replanting and
extension planting continued on schedule during 2024 with a total
of, respectively, 1,500 and 1,000 hectares completed by the end of
the year.
Agricultural selling prices
Firmer selling
prices throughout 2024 served to offset the impact of lower
production.
Opening at $925
per tonne, CIF Rotterdam, prices steadily increased to peak at
$1,390 per tonne in mid December and ended the year at $1,265 per
tonne. Despite some increased volatility in recent weeks, CPO
prices have remained comfortably above the $1,000 per tonne mark
since the start of 2025 and currently stand at $1,200 per
tonne.
The average
price realised from sales of CPO in 2024, including premia for
certified oil but net of export levy and duty, adjusted to FOB
Samarinda, was $819 per tonne (2023: $718 per tonne). The average
selling price for the group’s CPKO, on the same basis, was $1,094
per tonne (2023: $749 per tonne).
As previously
explained, the Indonesian government applies duties and tariffs on
exports of CPO and CPKO. These tariffs are calculated on a sliding
scale by reference to a CPO reference price that is set
periodically by the Indonesian government on the basis of
recognised benchmark CPO prices. Export levy is payable to a
dedicated fund that utilises levy income to support measures
designed to benefit the growing of oil palms in
Indonesia. Export duty is a tax
payable to the Indonesian government. The applicable tariffs, which
are adjusted from time to time, are published on the group’s
website at: www.rea.co.uk/investors/cpo-export-tariffs.
The group sells
CPO into the local Indonesian market which is not subject to export
levy or export duty. However, arbitrage between the Indonesian and
international CPO markets normally results in a local price that is
broadly in line with prevailing international prices after
adjustment of the latter for delivery costs and export tariffs and
restrictions. Changes to export tariffs and restrictions therefore
have an indirect effect on the prices that the group achieves on
sales of its CPO.
Local prices for
CPO and CPKO, FOB Belawan/Dumai, currently stand at, respectively,
$837 and $1,485 per tonne (2024: $833 and $1,145 per
tonne).
Sustainability and Environmental, Social and
Governance
Each year the
group participates in the SPOTT assessment by the Zoological
Society of London which assesses palm oil producers, processors and
traders on their disclosures regarding their organisation, policies
and practices with respect to ESG matters. In the 2024 assessment,
published in November, the company’s score increased from 88.7 per
cent to 91.5 per cent, compared with an average score of 48.2 per
cent, ranking the group 8th (2023:
12th) out of the
100 palm oil companies assessed.
With increasing
focus on addressing the challenges of climate change and
deforestation, during 2024 the group installed processes and
control systems to enable the group to make sales of segregated oil
processed in one of its three mills (COM) and to comply with the
requirements of EUDR.
An independent
assessment was conducted to verify the group’s preparedness for
EUDR and concluded that the group had established a robust system
to meet the requirements of the EUDR due diligence system. EUDR,
which will prevent sales of non-compliant vegetable oils in the EU,
was due to come into effect at the end of 2024 but implementation
has been delayed by one year. COM remains ready to supply EUDR
compliant CPO that is expected to command higher sales premia as
soon as EUDR comes into force but, in the meanwhile, can now sell
RSPO compliant identity preserved segregated CPO which should also
attract valuable premia.
In parallel, the
group has continued to work with smallholder suppliers to increase
the certified component of the group’s overall supply chain and to
promote sustainable palm oil production. As a result, the
proportion of the group’s current CPO production that is RSPO
certified is continuing to increase towards the target of 100 per
cent by the end of 2025.
Stone and sand operations
Development of
the stone concession held by ATP and the sand concession held by
MCU continued to progress towards commercial production throughout
2024.
With the access
roads to the ATP quarry now open, some 75,000 tonnes of stone had
been produced, and the first volumes of some 40,000 tonnes had been
sold and delivered, by the end of the year. Production to date has
been from large boulders found across the ATP concession area as a
result of past rock falls, but work is now in hand to establish
access to the west face of the andesite deposit and to start bench
quarrying on that face around mid year. In the interim, clearance
of access to the west face will provide increasing volumes of loose
rock for crushing and sale. ATP expects to scale up production
steadily throughout 2025, with a target of 100,000 tonnes per month
by year end and thereafter. Local demand for crushed stone for
infrastructure projects remains strong and, as production levels
increase, ATP aims to conclude offtake agreements with major
interested purchasers at remunerative prices.
MCU has agreed
arrangements for the production of silica sand in the overburden
overlaying IPA’s coal with IPA’s coal mining contractor, who
already has equipment on site and has, to date, stockpiled some
16,000 tonnes of sand. The contractor has been appointed to mine
the silica sand on behalf of MCU on terms similar to those that
previously applied to mining coal at IPA. The contractor will
commission a sand washing plant in the coming weeks and thereafter
expects to be in a position to produce some 50,000 tonnes of sand
per month, scaling up to some 100,000 tonnes per month in the
second half of the year. The market for sand appears to be large,
but under greater price pressure than the market for stone.
Nonetheless, offtake agreements should be at prices and for volumes
that will support commercial production.
Agreements have
been put in place to establish ATP as a 95 per cent subsidiary of
the company and MCU as a 49 per cent owned associate company. Both
companies are now being run and accounted for on that basis.
Applications to complete formalisation of the new ownership
structure are in progress.
Finance
The semi-annual
dividends arising on the preference shares in June and December
2024 were paid on their respective due dates.
During 2024, a
total of £9,186,000 nominal of the
8.75 per cent guaranteed sterling
notes 2025 issued by the company’s
wholly owned subsidiary, REAF, were purchased for
cancellation. The purchases were
made through Guy Butler Limited as to £3,000,000 nominal in
September 2024, as to £4,626,000 nominal in October 2024 and as to
£1,560,000 nominal in December 2024. Following the purchase and
cancellation in January 2025 of a further £300,000 nominal of
sterling notes, currently there remain in issue £21,366,000 nominal
of sterling notes due for redemption at 104 per cent of their
nominal amount on 31 August 2025.
In preparation
for that redemption, the group has been taking steps to secure
additional local bank funding in Indonesia. As a result, agreements
were reached with Bank Mandiri during 2024 for an additional Rp 350
billion ($21.4 million) loan to REA Kaltim, a new loan of Rp 250
billion ($15.3 million) to CDM, a repackaged loan facility for KMS
providing an additional Rp 157 billion ($9.6 million), and to
permit immediate draw down of all three loans. Net of 2024
repayments totalling Rp 230 billion ($14.1 million) of existing
Bank Mandiri loans, these new loans provided the group with
additional cash resources of Rp 527 billion ($32.2
million).
Outlook
The historically
high CPO price ruling in the second half of 2024 reflected the
lower levels of CPO production seen during the year. Whilst it is
likely that there will be some recovery in production going
forward, supplies remain tight and are expected to stay that way
well into 2025 as Indonesia continues to push increased use of
biodiesel in transport fuel. This
encourages the hope that prices will be sustained at levels above
the average for 2024.
The better
average price for CPO over 2024 more than offset the decline in
crop. As a result, the group will
report improved results for
2024. Looking forward, yields are
expected to recover from the slightly depressed levels of 2024 and,
if prices do remain at above the average level of 2024, this should
mean a further improvement in the profitability of the agricultural
operations. With the addition in
2025 of positive contributions from the stone and sand operations,
the prospects for the group are
encouraging.
Publication of results
In line with the
timetable adopted in previous years, the final results for 2024 are
due to be announced, and the annual report in respect of 2024
published, at the end of April 2024.
Enquiries:
R.E.A. Holdings plc
Tel: 020 7436 7877