AI Terminal

MODULE: AI_ANALYST
Interactive Q&A, Risk Assessment, Summarization
MODULE: DATA_EXTRACT
Excel Export, XBRL Parsing, Table Digitization
MODULE: PEER_COMP
Sector Benchmarking, Sentiment Analysis
SYSTEM ACCESS LOCKED
Authenticate / Register Log In

Bekaert NV

Earnings Release Jul 26, 2019

3915_ir_2019-07-26_c30e23f4-de0e-470f-bffe-1bbc42393c0f.pdf

Earnings Release

Open in Viewer

Opens in native device viewer

Press - Investors Katelijn Bohez T +32 56 76 66 10 www.bekaert.com

Press release Regulated information

26 July 2019 – 7:00 a.m. CET

2019 first half-year results

Bekaert improves profitability and reduces debt leverage

Underlying EBIT up 14% to € 126 million – Net debt / underlying EBITDA of 2.6, down from 3.11

Highlights

In challenging market conditions, Bekaert improved its financial performance in the first half of 2019:

  • achieved 3% sales growth, particularly in tire and construction markets
  • realized major cost savings in operations and overheads
  • enhanced our pricing power and product-mix
  • improved the business mix of Bridon-Bekaert Ropes Group
  • significantly improved the average working capital on sales
  • deleveraged and successfully refinanced debt.

Underlying EBIT reached € 126 million for the first half of 2019, up 14% from last year and representing a margin on sales of 5.7%. Underlying EBITDA totaled € 239 million, up 12% and reflecting a margin of 10.8%. Underlying ROCE was 9.3% compared with 8.1% for the same period last year. Net debt on underlying EBITDA improved from 3.1 (as per 30 June 2018) over 2.7 (at the close of 2018) to 2.6 on 30 June 2019.

Outlook

The business conditions in various sectors are trending lower as a result of continued uncertainty. We do not foresee a rebound in our agriculture, automotive OEM, and industrial markets in the near future. We project tire and construction markets to hold up well, but with the normal seasonality of the second half of the year.

We will continue to offset the headwinds with effective cost actions and by making further progress in enhancing our operating performance.

Despite seasonality and a softening demand in various sectors, we will continue to focus on year-on-year underlying EBIT margin improvement as we progressively rebuild to above 7% over the medium term.

We will further strengthen our balance sheet with strict control on working capital and capital expenditure, in order to continue reducing net debt/underlying EBITDA.

Press release – 26 July 2019 - Half Year Results 2019 1/30

1 All comparisons are made relative to the first half of 2018.

Market developments and significant events in the first half of 2019

Demand from tire markets remained solid, but started to slow at the end of the second quarter. Demand for steel fibers for concrete reinforcement was strong throughout the first half. The highly competitive steel wire solutions business suffered from weak demand in various sectors globally. Bridon-Bekaert Ropes Group continued to focus on improving the business mix and booked higher sales in oil & gas and mining markets.

We have faced some severe headwinds in the first half of 2019 due to various factors: the impacts from trade tensions and policy changes; an overall demand decline in industrial and agriculture markets; the adverse inventory valuation effect from raw material price decreases; and the impact from social actions in Belgium following the announcement of the restructuring plans.

Financial Statements Summary

Underlying Reported
in millions of € H1 2018 H2 2018 H1 2019 H1 2018 H2 2018 H1 2019
Consolidated sales 2 157 2 149 2 218 2 157 2 149 2 218
Operating result (EBIT) 111 99 126 101 46 115
EBIT margin on sales 5.1% 4.6% 5.7% 4.7% 2.1% 5.2%
Depreciation, amortization and impairment losses 103 113 112 103 136 111
EBITDA 214 212 239 204 182 226
EBITDA margin on sales 9.9% 9.9% 10.8% 9.5% 8.5% 10.2%
ROCE 8.1% 8.0% 9.3% 7.4% 5.6% 8.5%
Combined sales 2 537 2 537 2 619 2 537 2 537 2 619

Sales

Bekaert achieved +2.9% consolidated sales growth in the first half of 2019, reaching € 2 218 million in revenue. Favorable currency movements (+1.6%) and the aggregate effect of a positive price-mix and passed-on wire rod price reductions contributed +2.7% to the top line. These effects were partly offset by lower volumes (-1.1%) and divestments (-0.3%). Combined sales reached € 2 619 million, including firm revenue growth of the joint ventures in Brazil.

Underlying EBIT bridge

Bekaert's underlying EBIT for the first half of 2019 was € 126 million, reflecting a margin of 5.7% and an increase by € 15 million compared with the same period last year. Lower overhead costs and enhanced operational cost effectiveness contributed € +31 million. The small decline in sales volumes had a positive impact on underlying EBIT due to a favorable mix effect across business units. Pricing, mix and inventory valuation elements were negative in the aggregate due to adverse inventory valuation effects. Depreciation, the weaker results of the engineering department and the result variances of a number of smaller activity platforms (with other performance indicators than tonnage because of lightweight materials and unit sales) are included in 'Other'.

in millions of €

Note on segment reporting

In line with the organizational changes announced 1 March 2019, Bekaert's segment reporting has changed in 2019. The new reporting segments are:

  • Rubber Reinforcement This Business Unit serves industries that use tire cord, bead wire, hose reinforcement wire and conveyor belt reinforcement.
  • Steel Wire Solutions This Business Unit serves industrial, agricultural, consumer and construction markets with a broad range of steel wire products and solutions.
  • Specialty Businesses This Business Unit includes building products, fiber technologies, combustion technology and sawing wire.
  • Bridon-Bekaert Ropes Group (BBRG) BBRG includes the ropes and advanced cords businesses.

Consolidated and combined sales by Segment - in millions of €

Consolidated third party sales H1 2018 H1 2019 Share Variance2 Organic FX M&A
Rubber Reinforcement 947 1 014 46% +7% +5% +2% -
Steel Wire Solutions 762 751 34% -1% -3% +2% -
Specialty Businesses 209 202 9% -4% -5% +1% -
BBRG 227 242 11% +7% +6% +1% -
Group 11 10 - -12% +42% -1% -53%
Total 2 157 2 218 100% +3% +2% +2% -

Combined third party sales3 H1 2018 H1 2019 Share Variance2 Organic FX M&A
Rubber Reinforcement 1 021 1 099 42% +8% +7% +1% -
Steel Wire Solutions 1 073 1 074 41% - - - -
Specialty Businesses 209 202 8% -4% -5% +1% -
BBRG 227 242 9% +7% +5% +1% -
Group 7 1 - -79% - +1% -80%
Total 2 537 2 619 100% +3% +3% +1% -

Quarter-on-quarter sales 2019 – in millions of €

Consolidated third party sales 1st Q 2nd Q Q2:Q1 Q2 y-o-y4
Rubber Reinforcement 502 512 +2% +5%
Steel Wire Solutions 376 375 - -3%
Specialty Businesses 97 105 +8% -3%
BBRG 117 125 +7% +8%
Group 2 7 +262% +47%
Total 1 094 1 124 +3% +2%
Combined third party sales3 1st Q 2nd Q Q2:Q1 Q2 y-o-y4
Rubber Reinforcement 544 555 +2% +6%
Steel Wire Solutions 535 539 +1% +1%
Specialty Businesses 97 105 +8% -3%
BBRG 117 125 +7% +8%
Group 1 1 +7% -71%
Total

2 Comparisons are made relative to the first half of 2018, unless otherwise indicated 3 Combined sales are sales of fully consolidated companies plus 100% of sales of joint ventures and associates after intercompany elimination 4 Q2 year-on-year sales: 2nd quarter 2019 versus 2nd quarter 2018

Segment reports

Rubber Reinforcement

Underlying Reported
Key figures (in millions of €) H1 2018 H2 2018 H1 2019 H1 2018 H2 2018 H1 2019
Consolidated third party sales 947 960 1 014 947 960 1 014
Consolidated sales 964 975 1 031 964 975 1 031
Operating result (EBIT) 84 93 94 66 86 91
EBIT margin on sales 8.7% 9.5% 9.1% 6.9% 8.8% 8.8%
Depreciation, amortization and impairment losses 62 66 63 63 65 63
EBITDA 146 158 157 129 151 154
EBITDA margin on sales 15.2% 16.2% 15.3% 13.4% 15.5% 15.0%
Combined third party sales 1 021 1 052 1 099 1 021 1 052 1 099
Segment assets 1 770 1 701 1 683 1 770 1 701 1 683
Segment liabilities 334 337 290 334 337 290
Capital employed 1 436 1 364 1 393 1 436 1 364 1 393
ROCE - FY2018 references 12.9% 13.6% 11.1% 13.2%

Bekaert's Rubber Reinforcement business achieved 7% sales growth, driven by firm organic growth (+5.3%) and favorable currency movements (+1.7%). The organic growth stemmed from higher volumes (+4.3% topline impact) and the positive aggregate effect (+1.1%) of price-mix and passed-on raw material price changes.

The business unit achieved more than 12% volume growth in China thanks to strong demand and increased market share. The positive aggregate effect of price-mix and passed-on raw material price changes boosted a double-digit sales growth in North America and India. Lower economic activity during the general elections in the first quarter drove sales down in Indonesia. EMEA recorded almost 2% sales growth driven by solid sales in Slovakia and Russia.

The hose reinforcement markets in EMEA and North America remained weak and demand from tire markets softened at the end of the second quarter, particularly in EMEA, China and South-East Asia.

Sales increased by almost 8% at the combined level, which includes the firm sales growth (+16%) of our tire cord joint venture in Brazil.

Underlying EBIT increased by +12% to € 94 million, at a margin of 9.1%. Profitability improved significantly across all activities in Asia, but declined in EMEA due to operational issues, inventory write-offs and weakening volumes in the second quarter. Profitability remained about stable in the US despite of a negative inventory valuation effect and the supply chain issues caused by changes in trade duties and flooding.

Reported EBIT was € 91 million, up +38% from last year when EBIT was impacted by significant one-off elements (€ -18 million) reflecting the impairments and expenses related to the closure of the Figline plant in Italy.

Underlying EBITDA improved by +8% to € 157 million with a margin on sales of 15.3%.

Capital expenditure (PP&E) was € 27 million and mainly included investments in Vietnam, Turkey, Russia and Indonesia.

We take into account the usual seasonal effects of the second half of the year and are cautious about the effects of the automotive sector decline across all continents. While the tire business is mainly a replacement market with less cyclical effects, we did see demand from tire markets soften toward the end of the 2nd quarter. We see no signs of a rebound in our hose reinforcement wire markets.

Steel Wire Solutions

Underlying Reported
Key figures (in millions of €) H1 2018 H2 2018 H1 2019 H1 2018 H2 2018 H1 2019
Consolidated third party sales 762 735 751 762 735 751
Consolidated sales 789 765 778 789 765 778
Operating result (EBIT) 38 19 28 48 11 26
EBIT margin on sales 4.8% 2.5% 3.5% 6.1% 1.5% 3.4%
Depreciation, amortization and impairment losses 24 22 28 24 25 27
EBITDA 62 41 55 72 36 53
EBITDA margin on sales 7.9% 5.4% 7.1% 9.1% 4.7% 6.9%
Combined third party sales 1 073 1 045 1 074 1 073 1 045 1 074
Segment assets 1 024 1 012 994 1 024 1 012 994
Segment liabilities 343 332 296 343 332 296
Capital employed 681 681 697 681 681 697
ROCE - FY2018 references 8.5% 7.9% 8.8% 7.6%

The business unit Steel Wire Solutions reported a sales decrease of -1.5% compared with the first half of 2018. Favorable currency movements (+1.8%) and the positive aggregate effect (+3.0%) of price-mix and passed-on wire rod price changes could not entirely offset the impact from lower volumes (-6.3%).

The economic uncertainty affecting the automotive, other industrial and agricultural market demand drove sales down in EMEA and North America. The business climate in Latin America remained difficult, particularly in Ecuador. The steel wire activities in Asia reported lower sales as a result of the downsized activity platform in Malaysia and weak business conditions in Indonesia, which could not be offset by firm growth in India and China.

Sales were stable at the combined level. Our steel wire joint venture in Brazil recorded firm sales growth in the second quarter.

Underlying EBIT was € 28 million, 28% lower than in the same period last year and reflecting a margin on sales of 3.5%. This reflected the weak performance in EMEA and the Americas. Reported EBIT decreased -45% to € 26 million and included the impact of go-slow actions in the steel wire solutions activities of the Zwevegem (Belgium) campus, whereas reported EBIT for the first half of 2018 included positive one-off elements related to the sale of land and building in Shah Alam, Malaysia. The underlying EBITDA margin decreased by 9% to 7.1%.

The significant volume decline in most markets, the negative non-cash effects from inventory valuation corrections, and (on the reported EBIT level) the one-off impact from social actions throughout the second quarter in Zwevegem, Belgium, all weighed on the profitability of the business unit.

Capital expenditure (PP&E) was € 13 million and mainly included investments in Slovakia, the US and Chile.

We do not anticipate demand recovery in our markets and take into account the usual seasonal effects of the second half of the year. We are taking actions to improve the financial performance of the business unit despite of all headwinds.

Specialty Businesses

Underlying Reported
Key figures (in millions of €) H1 2018 H2 2018 H1 2019 H1 2018 H2 2018 H1 2019
Consolidated third party sales 209 202 202 209 202 202
Consolidated sales 214 211 208 214 211 208
Operating result (EBIT) 18 7 25 19 -53 18
EBIT margin on sales 8.6% 3.4% 12.0% 9.0% -24.9% 8.6%
Depreciation, amortization and impairment losses 8 14 8 8 69 10
EBITDA 27 21 33 27 16 27
EBITDA margin on sales 12.5% 10.0% 15.7% 12.5% 7.7% 13.2%
Segment assets 357 299 320 357 299 320
Segment liabilities 88 81 68 88 81 68
Capital employed 270 218 252 270 218 252
ROCE - FY2018 references 11.4% 20.7% -14.8% 14.7%

Third party sales were -3.5% down for the business unit Specialty Businesses, with significant differences in market dynamics and performance trends between the individual activities and between the first two quarters of the year.

Building products achieved +6% revenue growth in the first half of 2019. The vigorous first quarter sales growth (+12%) on strong volumes could not be repeated in the second quarter (+1%) due to volume shortage arising from the strike in the manufacturing plant in Moen (Belgium), following the announcement on 28 March 2019 to close the plant by year-end 2019. The fiber technologies activities (-3.5%) were affected by lower sales in diesel particulate filtration media and a lower activity level in the Belgian plant due to solidarity actions related to the Belgian restructuring plans. The combustion activities (-9.2%) further weakened in the second quarter of 2019. Sales of (diamond) sawing wire were limited.

Underlying EBIT increased +36% to € 25 million, reflecting a margin of 12%, mainly driven by a strong underlying performance of building products activities and less loss in the sawing wire business which turned EBITDA-breakeven. Reported EBIT was 7% down compared with last year and included one-off elements related to the impairments and losses generated by the strike in the Belgian building products plant and the go-slow actions in the fiber technologies plant in Belgium. These impacts amounted to € -5.4 million for the segment. The closing of the Costa Rica building products plant added almost € -2 million in one-off elements.

We anticipate continued firm demand in building products and will take actions to solve the volume shortage we have been confronted with in the second quarter of the year. The OE automotive downturn is expected to continue to affect the diesel filter media business of the fiber technologies activities. We do anticipate an uplift of combustion technology sales due to seasonal demand patterns and we are in the process of analyzing different opportunities about the future of the diamond wire business.

Bridon-Bekaert Ropes Group

Underlying Reported
Key figures (in millions of €) H1 2018 H2 2018 H1 2019 H1 2018 H2 2018 H1 2019
Consolidated third party sales 227 237 242 227 237 242
Consolidated sales 228 238 244 228 238 244
Operating result (EBIT) 2 -9 6 -1 -19 8
EBIT margin on sales 0.8% -3.7% 2.6% -0.3% -8.1% 3.4%
Depreciation, amortization and impairment losses 14 15 13 14 21 11
EBITDA 16 6 19 14 2 19
EBITDA margin on sales 7.0% 2.6% 8.0% 6.0% 0.8% 7.9%
Segment assets 572 561 603 572 561 603
Segment liabilities 115 120 101 115 120 101
Capital employed 457 440 502 457 440 502
ROCE - FY2018 references -1.5% 2.6% -4.4% 3.4%

Bridon-Bekaert Ropes Group (BBRG) achieved 6.8% top line growth which stemmed from solid organic growth (+5.5%) and favorable currency movements (+1.3%). The organic growth was the result of an improved product- and price-mix in ropes and modest sales growth in advanced cords.

The ropes business of BBRG booked solid sales growth in oil & gas, mining, and crane & industrial applications. In fishing and marine markets, sales were stable compared to last year. Demand from construction markets knew a slow start in 2019, which led to a weaker project business compared with the first half of 2018.

The advanced cords (a-cords) activities saw continued strong demand in timing belt markets and tailing-off demand for automotive and hoisting applications.

Underlying EBIT and EBITDA improved significantly as a result of successful profit restoration actions, particularly in the Americas. The impact of margin improvement actions in EMEA was partly offset by provisions totaling € -2 million. Reported EBIT was € 8 million and included one-off reversals of impairments. The EBITDA margin increased to 8%, up 33% from the same period last year.

BBRG invested € 4 million in PP&E, half the amount of the same period last year.

Customer activity in the mining industry is projected to remain robust across all regions. In oil and gas markets, business conditions are projected to remain stable in North America but significantly weaker in EMEA, due to a low order intake of project business in the second half of 2019. Softening demand for the advanced cords' automotive and hoisting markets is likely to persist.

Investment update and other information

On 1 March 2019 Bekaert announced important organizational and leadership changes to sharpen a customer-centric organization focus and revitalize Bekaert's business performance. The new organizational structure consists of four Business Units and four Global Functional Domains. The new Bekaert Group Executive (BGE, led by Matthew Taylor, CEO), will focus on value growth and higher-level performance. The new leadership team is composed of experienced Bekaert executives and externally recruited top managers. On 15 July 2019, Taoufiq Boussaid joined the company as CFO.

On 28 March 2019 Bekaert announced restructuring plans in Belgium as part of the actions taken worldwide to rebuild the financial performance of the business. These actions include, among others, the plans to downsize and close certain activities in Belgium. The restructuring will affect more than 250 jobs. Negotiations are ongoing and leave uncertainties about the terms and conditions of the social plan. Since the associated costs cannot be estimated with a reasonable level of accuracy, the 2019 half-year results do not reflect the social impact of the announced restructuring. They include only the related asset impairments (€ -1.7 million).

On 17 June 2019 Bekaert successfully issued a Schuldschein loan for a total amount of € 320.5 million, above the initial target of € 250 million. The Schuldschein was issued to partially refinance the bridge loan which the company entered into in October 2018. The Schuldschein has maturities of 4, 6 and 8 years, with both fixed and variable interest rates. The transaction was conducted with an average interest margin of approximately 1.5% and has enabled Bekaert to extend its average debt maturity profile as well as its investor base. All debt instruments of Bekaert are covenant-free.

Net debt was € 1 253 million on 30 June 2019, down € -171 million from 30 June 2018 when excluding the impact of first-time applying IFRS 16 ('Leases': € +85 million net debt impact). Investments in PP&E amounted to € 48 million, half of the spend in the first half of 2018 (€ 96 million). Working capital actions, a lower dividend and significantly lower interest charges enabled continued progress in deleveraging debt: net debt on underlying EBITDA further improved from 3.1 (30 June 2018) over 2.7 (at the close of 2018) to 2.6 on 30 June 2019.

Between 1 January 2019 and 30 June 2019, Bekaert granted 13 787 treasury shares to the Chairman of the Board of Directors, Mr Jürgen Tinggren, as part of his fixed remuneration. As a result, Bekaert owned 3 888 245 treasury shares at 30 June 2019.

Financial Review

Financial results

Bekaert achieved an operating result (EBIT-Underlying) of € 126 million (versus € 111 million in the same period last year). This equates to a margin on sales of 5.7% (versus 5.1% in the first half of 2018). The oneoff items amounted to € -12 million (€ -10 million in the first half of 2018) and included unaccrued expenses related to the plant closure in Italy (€ -2.6 million) and the asset impairments and operational losses incurred since the announcement of the restructuring plans in Belgium. The costs associated to the social plan in relation to this restructuring cannot be estimated with a reasonable level of accuracy at this point in time. Therefore no provisions are included yet in the financial statements of the first half. Including the one-off items, EBIT was € 115 million, representing an EBIT margin on sales of 5.2% (versus € 101 million or 4.7% last year). Underlying EBITDA was € 239 million (10.8% margin) compared with € 214 million (9.9%) and EBITDA reached € 226 million, or an EBITDA margin on sales of 10.2% (versus 9.5%).

Overhead expenses (underlying) decreased by € 18 million to 8.6% as a percentage of sales (versus 9.7% in 2018). Selling expenses were € 3 million lower due to cost saving measures. The administrative expenses decreased by € 12 million (underlying) due to lower consultancy costs and other cost savings.

The research and development expenses amounted to € 33 million, a decrease of € 2 million (underlying). Underlying other operating revenues and expenses were about stable (€ +8 million). Reported other operating revenues and expenses (€ +7 million) were lower in comparison with last year (€ +24 million) which included the gain on the sale of land and buildings related to the plant closures in Huizhou (China) and Shah Alam (Malaysia).

Interest income and expenses amounted to € -33 million, down from € -45 million in the first half of 2018 due to debt refinancing at lower interest rates, partly offset by the additional interest expense (€ -2 million) following the introduction of IFRS 16 ('Leases'). Other financial income and expenses were limited and stable.

Income taxes increased from € -23 million to € -32 million due to higher profitability in various tax paying entities. The overall effective tax rate was 40%, unchanged from the first half of 2018.

The share in the result of joint ventures and associated companies was € +13 million (versus € +12 million in the first half of last year), reflecting the improved performance of the joint ventures in Brazil.

The result for the period thus totaled € 62 million, compared with € 45 million in the first half of 2018. The result attributable to non-controlling interests was € +4 million (versus € -10 million in the same period last year which reflected the net loss representation of BBRG as non-controlling interest for the share then held by the minority shareholder). After non-controlling interests, the result for the period attributable to equity holders of Bekaert was € +58 million, compared with € +54 million last year. Earnings per share amounted to € +1.03, up from € +0.96 in the first half of 2018.

Balance sheet

As at 30 June 2019, shareholders' equity represented 34.6% of total assets, up from 34.1% at year-end 2018. The gearing ratio (net debt to equity) was 81% (versus 76% at year-end 2018).

Net debt was € 1 253 million, up from € 1 153 million as at 31 December 2018 and down from € 1 339 million as at 30 June 2018. Net debt on underlying EBITDA was 2.6, compared with 3.1 on 30 June 2018 and 2.7 on 31 December 2018.

Cash flow statement

Cash from operating activities amounted to € 134 million (versus € -17 million in the first half of 2018) as a result of higher cash generation and a reduction in cash-outs to fund working capital by the introduction of an off-balance sheet factoring program since the second half of 2018.

Cash flow attributable to investing activities amounted to € -56 million (versus € -54 million in the first half of 2018): cash-out from capital expenditure was substantially lower in the first half of 2019 (€ 55 million versus € 95 million last year). The 2018 numbers included the proceeds from the sale of land and buildings in China and Malaysia (cash-in of € 41 million).

Cash flows from financing activities totaled € -60 million, unchanged from last year. The cash-in from the Schuldschein issuance (€ 320.5 million) was used to repay a large part of a bridge loan.

NV Bekaert SA (statutory accounts)

The Belgium-based entity's sales amounted to € 169 million, compared with € 200 million in the first half of 2018. The operating profit before non-recurring results was € 22 million, compared with € 29 million in the first half of last year. The financial result was € 57 million (versus € 9 million in the first half of 2018) and included € 37 million dividends received. This led to a result for the period of € +81 million compared with € +39 million in the first half of 2018.

Financial calendar

2019 half year results 26 July 2019
The results will be presented to the investment community at 02:00 p.m. CET.
This conference can be accessed live upon registration via the Bekaert website in listen-only mode.
Third quarter trading update 2019 15 November 2019
2019 full year results 28 February 2020

Notes

These unaudited and condensed consolidated interim financial statements have been prepared in accordance with IAS 34 – Interim Financial Reporting. This interim report only provides an explanation of events and transactions that are significant to understand the changes in financial position and financial performance since the last annual reporting period. It should therefore be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements for the financial year ended on December 31, 2018, which have been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and adopted by the European Union. In preparing this interim report, the same accounting policies and methods of computation have been used as in the 2018 annual consolidated financial statements except for the changes entailed by the coming into effect of IFRS 16 'Leases'. This standard holds an option not to restate comparative information and the Group elected that option and did not restate the comparative information for 2018; please refer to annex 12 'Adoption of IFRS 16' in this interim report. The Group also changed the Bekaert segment reporting in 2019 in line with the organizational changes announced 1 March 2019. For an overview of the IFRS standards, amendments and interpretations that have become effective in 2019, please refer to the Statement of Compliance (section 2.1) of the financial review in the 2018 annual Report at https://www.bekaert.com/en/investors/information-center/annual-reports.

Statement from the responsible persons

The undersigned states that, to the best of his knowledge:

  • the consolidated condensed interim financial statements of NV Bekaert SA and its subsidiaries as of 30 June 2019 have been prepared in accordance with the International Financial Reporting Standards, and give a true and fair view of the assets and liabilities, financial position and results of the whole of the companies included in the consolidation; and
  • the interim management report gives a fair overview of the information required to be included therein.
Frank Vromant Executive Vice President
Matthew Taylor Chief Executive Officer

Disclaimer

This press release may contain forward-looking statements. Such statements reflect the current views of management regarding future events, and involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Bekaert is providing the information in this press release as of this date and does not undertake any obligation to update any forward-looking statements contained in this press release in light of new information, future events or otherwise. Bekaert disclaims any liability for statements made or published by third parties and does not undertake any obligation to correct inaccurate data, information, conclusions or opinions published by third parties in relation to this or any other press release issued by Bekaert.

Company Profile

Bekaert (www.bekaert.com) is a world market and technology leader in steel wire transformation and coating technologies. We pursue to be the preferred supplier for our steel wire products and solutions by continuously delivering superior value to our customers worldwide. Bekaert (Euronext Brussels: BEKB) is a global company with 29 000 employees worldwide, headquarters in Belgium and € 5 billion in combined revenue.

Annex 1: Press release 26 July 2019

Consolidated income statement

(in thousands of €) H1 2018 H2 2018 H1 2019
Sales 2 156 620 2 148 649 2 218 184
Cost of sales -1 864 200 -1 914 460 -1 916 368
Gross profit 292 420 234 189 301 816
Selling expenses -91 275 -88 376 -89 426
Administrative expenses -86 877 -80 469 -71 258
Research and development expenses -37 011 -28 357 -33 355
Other operating revenues 47 210 25 368 12 162
Other operating expenses -23 591 -16 351 -5 382
Operating result (EBIT) 100 876 46 004 114 557
of which
EBIT - Underlying 110 716 99 424 126 082
One-off items -9 840 -53 420 -11 525
Interest income 390 2 645 1 330
Interest expense -45 250 -42 740 -34 694
Other financial income and expenses -462 -25 085 -578
Result before taxes 55 554 -19 176 80 615
Income taxes -22 522 -35 943 -32 251
Result after taxes (consolidated companies) 33 032 -55 119 48 364
Share in the results of joint ventures and associates 11 583 13 292 13 438
RESULT FOR THE PERIOD 44 615 -41 827 61 801
Attributable to
equity holders of Bekaert 54 266 -14 498 58 001
non-controlling interests -9 651 -27 329 3 800
EARNINGS PER SHARE (in € per share)
Result for the period attributable to equity holders of Bekaert
Basic 0.96 -0.26 1.03
Diluted 0.66 -0.26 0.99

Annex 2: Press release 26 July 2019

Reported and underlying

(in thousands of €) H1 2018 H1 2018 H1 2018 H1 2019 H1 2019 H1 2019
Reported of which
underlying
of which
one-offs
Reported of which
underlying
of which
one-offs
Sales 2 156 620 2 156 620 2 218 184 2 218 184
Cost of sales -1 864 200 -1 845 124 -19 076 -1 916 368 -1 909 148 -7 220
Gross profit 292 420 311 496 -19 076 301 816 309 036 -7 220
Selling expenses -91 275 -91 128 -147 -89 426 -87 939 -1 487
Administrative expenses -86 877 -81 961 -4 916 -71 258 -69 663 -1 595
Research and development expenses -37 011 -35 179 -1 832 -33 355 -33 047 -308
Other operating revenues 47 210 14 632 32 578 12 162 12 093 69
Other operating expenses -23 591 -7 144 -16 447 -5 382 -4 398 -984
Operating result (EBIT) 100 876 110 716 -9 840 114 557 126 082 -11 525

Annex 3: Press release 26 July 2019

One-off items

Cost of Selling Admini
strative
Other
operating
Other
operating
One-off items 1H 2019 (in thousands of €)
Restructuring programs by segment
Sales expenses expenses R&D revenues expenses Total
Rubber Reinforcement1 -2 622 - -31 - 0 -13 -2 665
Steel Wire Solutions 722 -22 -208 - - 2 494
Specialty Businesses2 -4 855 -767 -18 - 69 -369 -5 940
Bridon-Bekaert Ropes Group (BBRG) 6 -19 -49 - - -190 -251
Group -10 -647 -1 172 -208 - -414 -2 452
Total restructuring programs -6 759 -1 455 -1 477 -208 69 -983 -10 814
Impairment losses/ (reversals of
impairment losses) other than restructuring
Bridon-Bekaert Ropes Group (BBRG) 2 255 - - - - - 2 255
Total other impairment losses/(reversals) 2 255 - - - - - 2 255
Other events and transactions
Steel Wire Solutions3 -1 620 - -1 - - - -1 620
Specialty Businesses4 -1 096 - - -100 - - -1 196
Bridon-Bekaert Ropes Group (BBRG) - - 16 - - - 16
Group - -33 -133 - - - -166
Total other events and transactions -2 715 -33 -118 -100 - - -2 966
Total -7 220 -1 487 -1 595 -308 69 -983 -11 525
Cost of Selling Admini
strative
Other
operating
Other
operating
One-off items 1H 2018 (in thousands of €) Sales expenses expenses R&D revenues expenses Total
Restructuring programs by segment
Rubber Reinforcement -19 461 -147 -1 528 -1 832 18 503 -13 482 -17 946
Steel Wire Solutions -453 - -17 - 12 557 -2 440 9 647
Specialty Businesses 829 - -8 - - - 821
Bridon-Bekaert Ropes Group (BBRG) -9 - -2 875 -0 756 -323 -2 451
Group 18 - - - 319 -202 135
Intersegment - - - - -71 - -71
Total restructuring programs -19 077 -147 -4 428 -1 832 32 064 -16 447 -9 866
Environmental provisions/ (reversals of
provisions)
Group - - - - 250 - 250
Total environmental provisions/(reversals) - - - - 250 - 250
Other events and transactions
Steel Wire Solutions - - -7 - 38 - 31
Bridon-Bekaert Ropes Group (BBRG) - - -115 - 115 - -
Group - - -366 - 111 - -255
Total other events and transactions - - -489 - 264 - -224
Total -19 077 -147 -4 916 -1 832 32 579 -16 447 -9 840

1 Unaccrued expenses related to the closure of Figline plant (Italy).

2 Unaccrued expenses related to the closure of Dramix plant in Costa Rica;

In relation to the announced closure of Moen plant (Belgium), impairment losses of assets as well as losses incurred since announcement of closure are included in the accounts.

No sufficiently reliable estimate could be made for the expenses of the social plan at this point in time (see Annex 13: Other disclosures). 3 In relation to the announced closure of Moen plant (Belgium), additional productivity losses were incurred in the

the Steel Wire Solutions division in Belgium.

4 In relation to the announced closure of Moen plant (Belgium), additional productivity losses were incurred in the Fibers (Specialty Businesses) division in Belgium.

Annex 4: Press release 26 July 2019

Reconcillation of segment reporting

Key figures per segment

Underlying
(in millions of €) Rubber
Reinforcement
Steel Wire
Solutions
Specialty
Businesses
BBRG Group Inter
segment
H1 2019
Consolidated third party
sales 1 014 751 202 242 10 - 2 218
Consolidated sales 1 031 778 208 244 46 -87 2 218
Operating result (EBIT) 94 28 25 6 -31 4 126
EBIT margin on sales 9.1% 3.5% 12.0% 2.6% - - 5.7%
Depreciation, amortization,
impairment losses
63 28 8 13 7 -7 112
EBITDA 157 55 33 19 -24 -3 239
EBITDA margin on sales 15.3% 7.1% 15.7% 8.0% - - 10.8%
Segment assets 1 683 994 320 603 63 -136 3 526
Segment liabilities 290 296 68 101 89 -36 808
Capital employed 1 393 697 252 502 -26 -100 2 718
ROCE 13.6% 7.9% 20.7% 2.6% - - 9.3%
Capital expenditure - PP&E1 27 13 7 4 1 -3 48
Reported
(in millions of €) Rubber
Reinforcement
Steel Wire
Solutions
Specialty
Businesses
BBRG Group Inter
segment
H1 2019
Consolidated third party
sales
1 014 751 202 242 10 - 2 218
Consolidated sales 1 031 778 208 244 46 -87 2 218
Operating result (EBIT) 91 26 18 8 -33 4 115
EBIT margin on sales 8.8% 3.4% 8.6% 3.4% - - 5.2%
Depreciation, amortization,
impairment losses
63 27 10 11 7 -7 111
EBITDA 154 53 27 19 -26 -3 226
EBITDA margin on sales 15.0% 6.9% 13.2% 7.9% - - 10.2%
Segment assets 1 683 994 320 603 63 -136 3 526
Segment liabilities 290 296 68 101 89 -36 808
Capital employed 1 393 697 252 502 -26 -100 2 718
ROCE 13.2% 7.6% 14.7% 3.4% - - 8.5%
Capital expenditure - PP&E1 27 13 7 4 1 -3 48
Underlying
(in millions of €) Rubber
Reinforcement
Steel Wire
Solutions
Specialty
Businesses
BBRG Group Inter
segment
2018
Consolidated third party
sales
1 908 1 497 411 463 26 - 4 305
Consolidated sales 1 939 1 555 425 466 146 -226 4 305
Operating result (EBIT) 177 57 26 -7 -52 9 210
EBIT margin on sales 9.1% 3.7% 6.0% -1.5% - - 4.9%
Depreciation, amortization,
impairment losses
128 46 22 29 9 -18 216
EBITDA 305 103 48 22 -43 -9 426
EBITDA margin on sales 15.7% 6.6% 11.3% 4.8% - - 9.9%
Segment assets 1 701 1 012 299 561 118 -186 3 506
Segment liabilities 337 332 81 120 119 -82 908
Capital employed 1 364 681 218 440 -1 -104 2 598
ROCE 12.9% 8.5% 11.4% -1.5% - - 8.0%
Capital expenditure - PP&E1 103 48 36 19 10 -17 198

1 Gross increase of PP&E

Annex 5: Press release 26 July 2019

Consolidated statement of comprehensive income

(in thousands of €) H1 2018 H1 2019
Result for the period 44 615 61 801
Other comprehensive income (OCI)
Other comprehensive income reclassifiable to income statement in
subsequent periods
Exchange differences -19 203 13 759
Inflation adjustments 4 800 1 880
Cash flow hedges 450 -
Deferred taxes relating to reclassifiable OCI -78 447
OCI reclassifiable to income statement in subsequent periods, after
tax
-14 031 16 086
Other comprehensive income non-reclassifiable to income statement in
subsequent periods:
Remeasurement gains and losses on defined-benefit plans 11 099 -4 640
Net fair value gain (+)/loss (-) on investments in equity instruments
designated as at fair value through OCI
-3 427 -487
Deferred taxes relating to non-reclassifiable OCI -4 196 -17
OCI non-reclassifiable to income statement in subsequent periods,
after tax
3 476 -5 144
Other comprehensive income for the period -10 555 10 942
TOTAL COMPREHENSIVE INCOME FOR THE PERIOD 34 060 72 743
Attributable to
equity holders of Bekaert 43 582 67 645
non-controlling interests -9 522 5 098

Annex 6: Press release 26 July 2019

Consolidated balance sheet

Non-current assets
2 049 559
2 094 926
Intangible assets
114 502
111 455
Goodwill
149 255
149 307
Property, plant and equipment
1 459 449
1 415 593
RoU Property, plant and equipment
-
85 738
Investments in joint ventures and associates
153 671
168 303
Other non-current assets
34 279
29 227
Deferred tax assets
138 403
135 303
Current assets
2 399 930
2 374 846
Inventories
931 808
913 811
Bills of exchange received
57 727
48 207
Trade receivables
772 731
786 321
Other receivables
130 379
115 133
Short-term deposits
50 036
50 172
Cash and cash equivalents
398 273
418 902
Other current assets
58 430
41 832
Assets classified as held for sale
546
468
Total
4 449 489
4 469 772
Equity
1 516 002
1 547 123
Share capital
177 793
177 793
Share premium
37 751
37 751
Retained earnings
1 484 600
1 502 315
Other Group reserves
-303 213
-294 733
Equity attributable to equity holders of Bekaert
1 396 931
1 423 126
Non-controlling interests
119 071
123 997
Non-current liabilities
906 540
1 291 272
Employee benefit obligations
141 550
131 021
Provisions
29 031
37 602
Interest-bearing debt
686 665
1 073 896
Other non-current liabilities
11 402
11 787
Deferred tax liabilities
37 892
36 966
Current liabilities
2 026 947
1 631 377
Interest-bearing debt
942 041
664 342
Trade payables
778 438
671 637
Employee benefit obligations
118 427
130 813
Provisions
37 194
16 882
Income taxes payable
88 128
85 598
Other current liabilities
62 634
62 105
(in thousands of €) 31-Dec-18 30-Jun-19
Liabilities associated with assets classified as held for sale
85
-
Total
4 449 489
4 469 772

Annex 7: Press release 26 July 2019

Consolidated statement of changes in equity

Attributable to equity holders of Bekaert
Cumulative Non
in thousands of € Share
capital
Share
premium
Retained
earnings
Treasury
shares
translation
adjustments
Other
reserves
Total controlling
interests
Total
equity
Balance as at
1 January 2018 (as
previously reported)
Restatements
177 690
-
37 278
-
1 529 268
7 655
-103 037
-
-105 723
-
-47 821
-10 240
1 487 655
-2 585
95 381
-
1 583 036
-2 585
Balance as at
1 January 2018
Result for the period
177 690
-
37 278
-
1 536 923
54 266
-103 037
-
-105 723
-
-58 061
-
1 485 070
54 266
95 381
-9 651
1 580 451
44 615
Other comprehensive
Income
- - 5 352 - -17 990 1 954 -10 684 129 -10 555
Capital contribution by
non-controlling interests
- - - - - - - 213 213
Effect of other changes
in Group structure
- - 37 - 4 - 41 -41 -
Equity-settled share
based payment plans
- - 2 752 - - - 2 752 62 2 814
Treasury shares
Transactions
- - -2 828 -8 718 - - -11 546 - -11 546
Dividends - - -63 044 - - - -63 044 -278 -63 322
Balance as at
30 June 2018
177 690 37 278 1 533 458 -111 755 -123 709 -56 107 1 456 855 85 815 1 542 670
Balance as at
1 January 2019
177 793 37 751 1 484 600 -108 843 -130 102 -64 268 1 396 931 119 071 1 516 002
First adoption IFRIC 23 - - -4 365 - - - -4 365 - -4 365
Balance as at
1 January 2019
177 793 37 751 1 480 235 -108 843 -130 102 -64 268 1 392 566 119 071 1 511 637
Result for the period - - 58 001 - - - 58 001 3 800 61 801
Other comprehensive
Income
- - 2 059 - 12 053 -4 641 9 471 1 298 10 769
Capital contribution by
non-controlling interests
- - - - - - - 643 643
Equity-settled share
based payment plans
- - 2 645 - - - 2 645 - 2 645
Treasury shares
Transactions
- - -1 068 1 068 - - - - -
Dividends - - -39 557 - - - -39 557 -815 -40 372
Balance as at
30 June 2019
177 793 37 751 1 502 315 -107 775 -118 049 -68 909 1 423 126 123 997 1 547 123

Annex 8: Press release 26 July 2019

Consolidated cash flow statement

(in thousands of €) H1 2018 H1 2019
Operating result (EBIT) 100 876 114 557
Non-cash items included in operating result 131 462 125 558
Investing items included in operating result -31 549 436
Amounts used on provisions and employee benefit obligations -17 519 -22 148
Income taxes paid -35 837 -29 848
Gross cash flows from operating activities 147 433 188 554
Change in operating working capital -147 631 -65 284
Other operating cash flows -17 088 10 919
Cash flows from operating activities -17 286 134 189
Other portfolio investments
Dividends received
-89
1 141
-
1 023
Purchase of intangible assets -1 572 -3 066
Purchase of property, plant and equipment -94 768 -55 394
Proceeds from disposals of fixed assets 40 945 1 904
Cash flows from investing activities -54 343 -55 533
Interest received 443 1 284
Interest paid -20 583 -21 504
Gross dividends paid -63 183 -41 383
Proceeds from long-term interest-bearing debt 43 219 361 879
Repayment of long-term interest-bearing debt -47 628 -371 401
Cash flows from / to (-) short-term interest-bearing debt 41 074 -881
Treasury shares transactions -11 546 -
Other financing cash flows -2 058 11 832
Cash flows from financing activities -60 262 -60 175
Net increase or decrease (-) in cash and cash equivalents -131 891 18 481
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the period 418 779 398 273
Effect of exchange rate fluctuations -2 069 2 149
Cash and cash equivalents reclassified as held for sale -4 -
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the period 284 815 418 902

Annex 9: Press release 26 July 2019

Additional key figures

(in € per share) H1 2018 H1 2019
Number of existing shares at 30 June 60 373 841 60 408 441
Book value 24.13 23.56
Share price at 30 June 27.80 23.58
Weighted average number of shares
Basic
Diluted
56 449 661
64 204 185
56 508 707
64 031 841
Result for the period attributable to equity holders of Bekaert
Basic 0.96 1.03
Diluted 0.66 0.99
(in thousands of € - ratios)
EBITDA 204 011 225 574
EBITDA - Underlying 213 750 238 555
Depreciation and amortization and impairment losses 103 135 111 017
Capital employed 2 791 478 2 718 330
Operating working capital 1 031 431 956 237
Net debt 1 338 896 1 253 108
EBIT on sales 4.7% 5.2%
EBIT - Underlying on sales 5.1% 5.7%
EBITDA on sales 9.5% 10.2%
EBITDA - Underlying on sales 9.9% 10.8%
Equity on total assets 33.9% 34.6%
Gearing (net debt on equity) 86.8% 81.0%
Net debt on EBITDA 3.3 2.8
Net debt on EBITDA - Underlying 3.1 2.6
NV Bekaert SA - Statutory Profit and Loss Statement
(in thousands of €)
Sales 199 540 168 840
Operating result before non-recurring items 28 993 22 334
Non-recurring operational items 17 -
Operating result after non-recurring items 29 010 22 334
Financial result before non-recurring items 9 384 57 719
Non-recurring financial items -612 -479
Financial result after non-recurring items 8 772 57 240
Profit before income taxes 37 782 79 574
Income taxes 1 616 1 597
Result for the period 39 398 81 171

Annex 10: Press release 26 July 2019

Additional disclosures on disaggregation of revenues

The Group recognizes revenue from the following sources: delivery of products and, to a limited extend, of services and construction contracts. Bekaert assessed that the delivery of products represents the main performance obligation. The Group recognizes revenue at a point in time when it transfers control over a product to a customer. Customers obtain control when the products are delivered (based on the related inco terms in place). The amount of revenue recognized is adjusted for volume discounts. No adjustment is made for return nor for warranty as the impact is deemed immaterial based on historical information.

In the following table, net sales is disaggregated by industry, as this analysis is often presented in press releases, shareholders' guides and other presentations. The table includes a reconciliation of the net sales by industry with the Group's operating segments.

H1 2019
in thousands of €
Rubber
Reinforcement
Steel Wire
Solutions
Specialty
Businesses
BBRG Group Consolidated
Industry
Tire & Automotive 953 418 79 934 18 508 - - 1 051 860
Energy - 78 149 22 656 44 545 - 145 350
Construction - 297 156 140 213 32 363 - 469 732
Consumer Goods - 118 921 - - - 118 921
Agriculture - 119 150 - - - 119 150
Equipment 60 386 14 209 - 72 289 9 528 ** 156 412
Basic Materials - 43 379 16 929 72 382 - 132 690
Other - - 3 451 20 618 - 24 069
Total 1 013 804 750 898 201 757 242 197 9 528 2 218 184
H1 2018
in thousands of €
Rubber
Reinforcement
Steel Wire
Solutions
Specialty
Businesses
BBRG Group Consolidated
Industry
Tire & Automotive 882 829 83 207 20 594 - - 986 630
Energy - 75 693 35 990 39 112 2 053 * 152 848
Construction - 294 977 132 520 35 641 - 463 138
Consumer Goods - 122 449 - - - 122 449
Agriculture - 126 988 - - - 126 988
Equipment 64 659 17 153 - 70 097 4 966 ** 156 875
Basic Materials - 41 836 16 767 61 815 3 868 * 124 286
Other - - 3 273 20 133 - 23 406
Total 947 488 762 303 209 144 226 798 10 887 2 156 620

* Disposed operations

** Sales Engineering

Annex 11: Press release 26 July 2019

Additional disclosure on fair value of financial instruments

In accordance with IFRS5, specific interim disclosures are required regarding the fair value of each class of financial assets and financial liabilities and the way their fair value was measured.

The following tables list the different classes of financial assets and financial liabilities with their carrying amounts in the balance sheet and their respective fair value and analyzed by their measurement category under IFRS 9. Cash and cash equivalents, short-term deposits, trade and other receivables, bills of exchange received, loans and receivables primarily have short terms to maturity; hence, their carrying amounts at the reporting date approximate the fair values. For the same reason, the carrying amounts of trade and other payables also approximate their fair values. Furthermore, the Group has no exposure to collateralized debt obligations (CDOs). Abbreviations used are explained below:

Abbreviation Category in accordance with IFRS 9 AC Financial assets or financial liabilities at amortized cost FVTOCI/Eq Equity instruments designated as at fair value through OCI FVTPL/Mnd Financial assets mandatorily measured at fair value through profit or loss HfT Financial liabilities Held for Trading FVO Fair Value Option: financial liabilities designated as at fair value through profit or loss

5 IAS 34, Interim Reporting, §16(j), referring to IFRS 7, Financial Instruments: Disclosures, §§ 25, 26 and 28-30, and to IFRS 13, Fair Value Measurement, §§ 91-93(h), 94-96, 98 and 99.

31-Dec-18 30-Jun-19
Category in
Carrying amount vs fair value accordance Carrying Carrying
in thousands of € with IFRS 9 amount Fair value amount Fair value
Assets
Non-current financial assets
- Financial & other receivables
and cash guarantees AC 10 021 10 021 8 916 8 916
- Equity investments FVTOCI/Eq 11 153 11 153 10 379 10 379
- Derivatives
- Held for trading FVTPL/Mnd 1 407 1 407 1 049 1 049
Current financial assets
- Financial receivables and cash
guarantees AC 20 186 20 186 10 195 10 195
- Cash and cash equivalents AC 398 273 398 273 418 902 418 902
- Short term deposits AC 50 036 50 036 50 172 50 172
- Trade receivables AC 772 731 772 731 786 321 786 321
- Bills of exchange received AC 57 727 57 727 48 207 48 207
- Other current assets
- Other receivables AC 15 929 15 929 18 318 18 318
- Derivatives
- Held for trading FVTPL/Mnd 8 045 8 045 2 650 2 650
Liabilities
Non-current interest-bearing debt
- Leases AC 1 854 1 854 67 241 67 241
- Credit institutions AC 285 176 285 176 601 815 601 815
- Bonds AC 399 635 410 729 404 841 413 609
Current interest-bearing debt
- Leases AC 810 810 19 318 19 318
- Credit institutions AC 746 231 746 231 450 024 450 024
- Bonds AC 195 000 199 626 195 000 197 193
Other non-current liabilities
- Conversion option HfT 220 220 169 169
- Put option FVO 11 033 11 033 11 033 11 033
- Other derivatives HfT - - 435 435
- Other payables AC 150 150 150 150
Trade payables AC 778 438 778 438 671 637 671 637
Other current liabilities
- Other payables AC 10 355 10 355 5 179 5 179
- Derivatives
- Held for trading HfT 4 734 4 734 2 017 2 017
Aggregated by category in accordance with IFRS 9
Financial assets AC 1 324 903 1 324 903 1 341 031 1 341 031
FVTOCI/Eq 11 153 11 153 10 379 10 379
FVTPL/Mnd 9 452 9 452 3 699 3 699
Financial liabilities AC 2 417 648 2 433 368 2 415 205 2 426 166
HfT 4 954 4 954 2 621 2 621
FVO 11 033 11 033 11 033 11 033

Financial instruments by fair value measurement hierarchy

The fair value measurement of financial assets and financial liabilities can be characterized in one of the following ways:

  • 'Level 1' fair value measurement: the fair values of financial assets and liabilities with standard terms and conditions and traded on active liquid markets are determined with reference to quoted market prices in active markets for identical assets and liabilities. This mainly relates to financial assets at fair value through other comprehensive income such as the investment in Shougang Concord Century Holdings Ltd.
  • 'Level 2' fair value measurement: the fair values of other financial assets and financial liabilities are determined in accordance with generally accepted pricing models based on discounted cash flow analysis using prices from observable current market transactions and dealer quotes for similar instruments. This mainly relates to derivative financial instruments. Forward exchange contracts are measured using quoted forward-exchange rates and yield curves derived from quoted interest rates matching the maturities. Interest-rate swaps are measured at the present value of future cash flows estimated and discounted using the applicable yield curves derived from quoted interest rates. The fair value measurement of cross-currency interest-rate swaps is based on discounted estimated cash flows using quoted forward exchange rates, quoted interest rates and applicable yield curves derived therefrom.
  • 'Level 3' fair value measurement: the fair values of the remaining financial assets and financial liabilities are derived from valuation techniques which include inputs that are not based on observable market data. The share conversion option in the convertible bond issued in June 2016 is a non-closely related embedded derivative that has to be separated from the host debt instrument and measured at fair value through profit or loss. The fair value of the conversion option is determined as the difference between the fair value of the convertible bond as a whole (mid – source: Bloomberg) and the fair value of the host debt contract using a valuation model based on the prevailing market interest rate for similar plain vanilla debt instruments. The main factors determining the fair value of the convertible bond are the Bekaert share price (level 1), the reference swap rate (level 2), the volatility of the Bekaert share (level 3) and the credit spread (level 3). Consequently, the conversion option is classified as a level-3 financial instrument. Similarly, the fair value of the put option relating to non-controlling interests has not been based on observable market data, but on the most recent business plan as initially agreed between the partners in the business combination with Maccaferri. The fair value was established using discounted cash flows.

The following table shows the sensitivity of the fair value calculation to the most significant level-3 input for the conversion option and the put option.

Sensitivity analysis

in thousands of € Change Impact on conversion option
Volatility 3.5% increase by 304
-3.5% decrease by -106
Credit spread 25 bps increase by 34
-25 bps decrease by -8
Sensitivity analysis
in thousands of € Change Impact on put option
Discount rate 1.0% decrease by -1 231
Terminal value growth -0.5% decrease by -333
Average EBITDA / sales -0.5% decrease by -1 330

The following table provides an analysis of financial instruments measured at fair value in the balance sheet, in accordance with the fair value measurement hierarchy described above:

1H 2019
in thousands of € Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
Financial assets mandatorily measured as at fair
value through profit or loss
Derivative financial assets - 3 699 - 3 699
Equity instruments designated as at fair value
through OCI
Equity investments 4 754 5 625 - 10 379
Total assets 4 754 9 323 - 14 078
Financial liabilities held for trading
Conversion option - - 169 169
Other derivative financial liabilities - 2 451 - 2 451
Financial liabilities designated as at fair value through
profit or loss
Put option relating to non-controlling interests - - 11 033 11 033
Total liabilities - 2 451 11 202 13 653
2018
in thousands of €
Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
Financial assets mandatorily measured as at fair
value through profit or loss
Derivative financial assets - 9 452 - 9 452
Equity instruments designated as at fair value
through OCI
Equity investments 5 241 5 912 - 11 153
Total assets 5 241 15 364 - 20 605
Financial liabilities held for trading
Conversion option - - 220
Other derivative financial liabilities
Financial liabilities designated as at fair value through 220
- 4 734 - 4 734
profit or loss
Put option relating to non-controlling interests
- - 11 033 11 033

Annex 12: Press release 26 July 2019

Additional disclosures on adoption IFRS 16

IFRS 16 'Leases' became effective as from 1 January 2019 and supersedes IAS 17 'Leases' and related interpretations. The new standard eliminates the classification of leases as either operating leases or finance leases for a lessee. Instead, all leases are capitalized and accounted for in a similar way to finance leases under IAS 17, except short-term leases and leases of low-value assets for which an exemption is allowed. Lessor accounting remains largely unchanged.

As part of the transition to the new standard, the Group opted to apply the modified B approach, meaning that the liability is based on the discounted future cash flows, using the discount rate at transition date and assets equaling the liabilities at transition date. The Group opted not to restate the comparative information for 2018.

The Group decided to use the practical expedient for low-value leases on the rent contracts for small office equipment (e.g. printers).

On transition to IFRS 16, the Group recognized additional right-of-use assets and additional lease liabilities. As the Group opted to apply the modified B approach, there is no impact on retained earnings. The impact on transition is summarized below.

1 January
in thousands of € 2019
Right-of-use assets linked to ongoing lease contracts 76 302
Right-of-use assets linked to onerous lease contract 6 888
Accumulated depreciation on Right-of-Use assets -6 888
TOTAL RoU Property, Plant & Equipment 76 302
Lease liability linked to ongoing lease contracts 76 302
Lease liability linked to onerous lease contract 6 888
Total Lease liability 83 190
Provisions (decrease) -6 888

A RoU asset and lease liability has also been created for on onerous lease contract for which existed a provision at the end of 2018. The provision has been reclassified as an accumulated depreciation of the RoU asset on transition to IFRS 16.

Finance lease assets on the balance sheet at the end of 2018 have been reclassified into the RoU Property, Plant and Equipment section.

1 January
in thousands of € 2019
Right-of-use assets linked to existing finance lease contracts:
RoU Property, Plant & Equipment 8 651
Property, Plant & Equipment -8 651

When measuring lease liabilities for leases that were classified as operating leases, the Group discounted lease payments using its incremental borrowing rate at 1 January 2019. The weighted-average rate applied is 3.9%.

Below table shows the reconciliation of the operating lease commitments disclosed in the consolidated financial statements of 2018 and the opening balances under IFRS 16 in 2019.

1 January
in thousands of € 2019
Operating lease commitments at 31 December 2018 as disclosed in the Group's
consolidated financial statements
96 571
- Recognition exemption for leases of low-value assets -1 496
- Exclusion of service contracts -389
94 686
Discounted using the incremental borrowing rate at 1 January 2019 76 302
Finance lease liabilities recognized as at 31 December 2018 2 664 Δ =
83 190
Lease liabilities recognized at 1 January 2019 85 853

The change in accounting under IFRS 16 has a positive impact on underlying-EBITDA of approximately € 20.2 million for full year 2019.

Annex 13: Press release 26 July 2019

Other disclosures

Treasury shares

Between 1 January 2019 and 30 June 2019, Bekaert granted 13 787 treasury shares to the Chairman of the Board of Directors, Mr. Jürgen Tinggren, as part of his fixed remuneration. No shares were bought back in the course of the first semester. As a result, the number of treasury shares held by NV Bekaert SA amounts to 3 888 245 at 30 June 2019.

Related parties

There were no other related parties transactions or changes that could materially affect the financial position or results of the Group.

Contingent assets and liabilities

On 28 March 2019 the company announced its intention to restructure certain activities in Belgium. The process of coming to an agreement with the social partners on the terms and conditions of a social plan has not resulted in a collective labor agreement at balance sheet date. As a consequence, uncertainties exist around the main features of such plan and those affected by it. Since the associated costs cannot be estimated with a reasonable level of accuracy at this point in time, half-year results do not yet reflect the social impact of the intended restructuring. The accounts do include an impairment loss on assets in an amount of € 1.7 million.

Initial accounting IFRIC 23 "Uncertainty over Income tax Treatments"

This interpretation clarifies how to account for income taxes when it is unclear whether the tax authority will accept the Group's tax treatment.

The impact of the adoption of IFRIC 23 on the opening equity per 1 January 2019 is € 4.4 million bringing the total uncertain tax position to € 69.1 million.

The adjustment to the overall tax position is relatively minor for the following reasons:

  • Generally speaking the Group already applied a two-step methodology in terms of recognition and measurement of liabilities for uncertain tax positions;
  • Liabilities for uncertain tax positions qualifying as binary were not impacted by IFRIC 23;
  • Liabilities for uncertain tax positions with respect to transfer pricing related topics were already measured on the basis of a method very similar to the expected value method.

Annex 14: Press release 26 July 2019

Alternative performance measures: definitions and reasons for use

Metric Definition Reason for use
Capital employed
(CE)
Working capital + net intangible assets + net
goodwill + net property, plant and equipment + net
RoU Property, plant and equipment. The weighted
average CE is weighted by the number of periods
that an entity has contributed to the consolidated
result.
Capital employed consists of the main balance sheet
items that operating management can actively and
effectively control to optimize its financial performance,
and serves as the denominator of ROCE.
Capital ratio
(financial
autonomy)
Equity relative to total assets. This ratio provides a measure of the extent to which the
Group is equity-financed.
Combined figures Sum of consolidated companies + 100% of joint
ventures and associates after elimination of
intercompany transactions (if any). Examples:
sales, capital expenditure, number of employees.
In addition to Consolidated figures, which only comprise
controlled companies, combined figures provide useful
insights of the actual size and performance of the Group
including its joint ventures and associates.
EBIT Operating result (earnings before interest and
taxation).
EBIT consists of the main income statement items that
operating management can actively and effectively
control to optimize its profitability, and a.o. serves as the
numerator of ROCE and EBIT interest coverage.
EBIT –
underlying
EBIT before operating income and expenses that
are related to restructuring programs, impairment
losses, business combinations, business
disposals, environmental provisions or other
events and transactions that have a material one
off effect that is not inherent to the business.
EBIT – underlying is presented to enhance the reader's
understanding of the operating profitability before one-off
items, as it provides a better basis for comparison and
extrapolation.
EBITDA Operating result (EBIT) + depreciation,
amortization and impairment of assets + negative
goodwill.
EBITDA provides a measure of operating profitability
before non-cash effects of past investment decisions
and working assets.
EBITDA –
underlying
EBITDA before operating income and expenses
that are related to restructuring programs,
impairment losses, business combinations,
business disposals, environmental provisions or
other events and transactions that have a material
one-off effect that is not inherent to the business.
EBITDA – underlying is presented to enhance the
reader's understanding of the operating profitability
before one-off items and non-cash effects of past
investment decisions and working capital assets, as it
provides a better basis for comparison and
extrapolation.
EBIT interest
coverage
Operating result (EBIT) divided by net interest
expense.
The EBIT interest coverage provides a measure of the
Group's capability to service its debt through its
operating profitability.
Gearing Net debt relative to equity. Gearing is a measure of the Group's financial leverage
and shows the extent to which its operations are funded
by lenders versus shareholders.
Margin on sales EBIT, EBIT-underlying, EBITDA and EBITDA
underlying on sales.
Each of these ratios provides a specific measure of
operating profitability expressed as a percentage on
sales.
Net capitalization Net debt + equity. Net capitalization is a measure of the Group's total
financing from both lenders and shareholders.
Net debt Interest-bearing debt net of current loans, non
current financial receivables and cash guarantees,
short-term deposits, cash and cash equivalents.
Net debt is a measure of debt after deduction of financial
assets that can be deployed to repay the gross debt.
Net debt on
EBITDA
Net debt divided by EBITDA. Net debt on EBITDA provides a measure of the Group's
capability (expressed as a number of years) to repay its
debt through its operating profitability.
Return on capital
employed
(ROCE)
Operating result (EBIT) relative to the weighted
average capital employed.
ROCE provides a measure of the Group's operating
profitability relative to the capital resources deployed
and managed by operating management.
Return on equity
(ROE)
Result for the period relative to average equity. ROE provides a measure of the Group's net profitability
relative to the capital resources provided by its
shareholders.
Working capital
(operating)
Inventories + trade receivables + bills of exchange
received + advanced paid - trade payables -
advances received - remuneration and social
security payables - employment-related taxes.
Working capital includes all current assets and liabilities
that operating management can actively and effectively
control to optimize its financial performance. It
represents the current component of capital employed.

Talk to a Data Expert

Have a question? We'll get back to you promptly.