Statement by Bernhard Schreier, Chief Executive Officer of
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, for the Annual Press Conference on
June 13, 2007
The spoken word applies
Welcoming address
Highlights of financial year 2006/2007
Ladies and Gentlemen
The 2006/2007 financial year that has just closed was a good
one in terms of economic development, the industry's growth and
the results recorded by Heidelberg.
There was a further increase in capacity utilization at print
shops in the industrialized nations and I am happy to report that
the growth trajectory has continued in the U.S. and in Germany too.
The demand for print products is also still rising rapidly in
threshold countries.
These developments are reflected in this year's figures.
- For the fourth year in succession, our innovative solutions
and products that are geared to market needs have enabled us to
take advantage of the upturn in the world economy and the
industry's growth trend.
- Despite unfavorable exchange rate developments, we have
achieved our ambitious targets and even exceeded them in some
areas.
- Our order volume has kept on growing for over three
successive business periods. At 3.853 billion Euro for the period
under review, it was roughly seven percent up on the previous
year. This also augurs well for the new financial year that began
on April 1, 2007.
- Overall, sales climbed by six percent to 3.803 billion Euro.
We were up on the previous year's figures in every single quarter
of the financial year just closed. The fourth quarter alone
returned sales in excess of 1.2 billion Euro, the highest level
in the past five years on a like for like basis.
- Buoyed by the high sales volume, the order reserve at March
31, 2007 exceeded three months, thereby ensuring good capacity
utilization for the first six months of the current financial
year.
- In the period under review, we generated an operating profit
- including non-recurring items - of 362 million Euro. This is
equivalent to 9.5 percent of sales - an excellent result for a
mechanical engineering company and close to our target of ten
percent.
- We saw a significant improvement in our net profit -
including non-recurring tax items - to a level of 263 million
Euro. This led to a further increase in our earnings and the
value of the Heidelberg Group in terms of capital employed.
- Heidelberg shareholders will benefit from the further growth
in earnings. The Management Board and Supervisory Board will
propose to the Annual General Meeting on July 26 that a dividend
of 0.95 Euro per share be paid for financial year 2006/2007, up
from 0.65 Euro the previous year.
Ladies and Gentlemen
The financial year just ended proves that we are still the
market leader for sheetfed offset presses. We have even extended
this lead in some areas.
We have made progress in all sectors of relevance to the
company, unveiling additional technological innovations, cutting
costs, improving stock and asset management and increasing our
sales and profits.
The market development confirms we were spot on with our
strategic decision three years ago to offer customer-focused
solutions and products that provide added value for sheetfed offset
presses.
The general economic and market conditions are currently
continuing in a positive vein. We have also initiated
forward-looking projects and are pressing ahead with these with a
view to unveiling these at drupa in Düsseldorf at the end of
May 2008.
General economic and market conditions
Ladies and Gentlemen
Sales in our industry depend directly on how willing our
customers - print service providers - are to invest. This in turn
depends primarily on current and predicted economic growth, and the
situation is still looking very rosy in this respect.
We are expecting the global economy's high growth rates to
continue in the 2007 calendar year. Financial institutions and
banks are forecasting growth of around five percent in 2007.
This positive economic situation will help revive our
customers' business. We predict continued growth in the global
economy in the medium term and, as a result, further moderate
growth in print volumes.
Annual print volumes will climb at an above-average rate in
threshold countries. One reason for this is that the saturation
level for print products is still very low in these rapidly growing
national economies.
The Chinese and Indian printing industries in particular will
significantly increase their share of global production, with
growth rates of over eight percent. Print shop capacity in these
markets will need to increase and many new print shops will
continue to emerge over the coming years, especially in Asia.
The basic restoration of import duty exemption in China from
March 1, 2007 also suggests that the order and supply situation for
the Chinese market will gradually return to normal in the current
2007/2008 financial year.
In industrialized nations, the need for rationalization -
which will become more pressing due to higher prices for paper and
energy and increased personnel costs - will result in print shops
making replacement investments.
In Germany and the U.S. in particular, the print media
industry will make investments to safeguard its competitiveness.
This trend is also in evidence in the new financial year. Future
readiness to invest will help keep the industry's capacity
utilization stable at its current high level.
Business models will, however, need to be regularly adapted
to new market requirements resulting primarily from burgeoning
digitization, increasing concentration and growing
internationalization.
Ladies and Gentlemen
We still need to keep a close eye on exchange rate
developments. Over the past five years, the value of the Euro has
increased by 50 percent relative to the U.S. dollar and by 35
percent relative to the Japanese yen, a trend which looks unlikely
to change in the 2007 calendar year. Despite this, we have been
able to further consolidate our market position in the sheetfed
offset printing and postpress sectors in all regions.
Strategic activities
Ladies and Gentlemen
In financial year 2006/2007, the Heidelberg Group once again
made good progress in terms of innovations, efficiency, processes
and investments in the future.
Innovations:
In the year under review, we invested around six percent
of sales in research and development work on new presses and
systems, software development and the technical development of our
product portfolio. One indication of our achievements in this area
is the number of patents applied for. In 2006/2007, we matched the
high level from previous years with patent applications for 153 new
inventions - primarily in the press and postpress sectors. As at
March 31, 2007, Heidelberg had a total of 5,200 pending or existing
patents worldwide - more than any of our industry competitors.
We aim to turn many of our ideas into customer-focused
products. At the start of the financial year just closed, we
demonstrated our market lead as a solutions provider at the Ipex
trade fair held in the U.K. in April 2006, where we showcased over
20 prepress, press and postpress innovations. The main focus of
these innovations was increasing our customers' productivity.
One particular innovation I would like to make special
mention of is the Anicolor zoneless inking unit. This unit allows
offset printshops to produce the shortest of runs with much better
profit margins. Anicolor cuts the level of startup waste by as much
as 90 percent and the extremely short setup times increase capacity
by up to 50 percent for short runs.
Our peak performance press, the Speedmaster XL 105, achieves
performance levels 30 percent higher than comparative models, in
some cases even more. An order volume in excess of 400 million Euro
for this model is a good indication of the market's positive
response to the new press.
Our objective in introducing new larger-format presses is to
make more of an impact on the packaging printing market. At the
industry trade fair, drupa 2008 in Düsseldorf, we will be
unveiling a new generation of presses with the Speedmaster XL 145
and XL 162. The initial proofs from these presses were produced on
schedule in December 2006 and the quality was very promising.
Extensive market testing has revealed that a three centimeter wider
press - i.e. 145 instead of 142 centimeters - allows far higher
reserves in terms of productivity and flexibility. That is why we
are taking the Speedmaster XL 145 and XL 162 to drupa. We are also
developing a platesetter for this larger format to give us a
further boost in the packaging printing market. Our products will
feature a whole host of innovative solutions that will enable us to
provide an excellent service to the fastest growing sector in
sheetfed offset printing. All these innovations will give us a real
competitive edge for the future.
Efficiency and processes:
Ladies and Gentlemen
One of our key objectives is to protect the Heidelberg
Group's business even more effectively against the effects of
future economic downturns.
With this in mind, we are cutting our production costs. This
has been made possible thanks not least to the agreement on
safeguarding our future recently being extended to 2012. This
agreement essentially covered revisions to the arrangements on
extended working hours and job security and the introduction of the
collective agreement on pay grades.
As demonstrated by the large number of Heidelberg
installations in operation across the globe, we are also continuing
to focus on regional distribution and the further expansion of
areas of business that the economic situation has relatively little
bearing on. We are committed to increasing sales for packaging
printing and our 3S - service, spare parts and supplies - business.
In concrete terms, the aim in the medium term is to generate around
one quarter of total sales from 3S products and services.
Technologically speaking, we are ideally placed to achieve this
goal. Heidelberg is a world leader in the development and
utilization of remote service technologies for the remote
maintenance of software solutions and machinery.
We are also seeing tangible signs of progress following the
introduction of our Heidelberg Production System. This has led to
an increase in productivity at our sites of around five percent -
equivalent to tens of millions of Euro a year.
Investments:
Ladies and Gentlemen
With our eyes firmly set on customer benefits, we are
investing above all in staff training, new products and our sites.
Helped by a healthy order backlog and incoming order
situation, we are currently enjoying a high level of capacity
utilization. In the previous financial year, this resulted in us
taking on 580 new staff, primarily for our production operations in
Germany. The other new arrivals were a result of initial
consolidations.
Any further recruitment will depend on economic developments,
but it cannot be ruled out and we are continuing to take on
selected members of staff.
The new technologies and products referred to above also
require investment in extended or new production capacities at our
sites.
In September this year, we will be marking the 50th
anniversary of the Wiesloch-Walldorf site with the official opening
of the 35,000-square-meter Hall 11 for our new extra large presses.
Production and assembly operations will then start straight away in
preparation for the official presentation of the presses in
Düsseldorf at the end of May 2008.
This summer will see the completion of a second assembly hall
at our Qingpu site in China. The additional area of around 11,000
square meters will triple our local capacity to roughly 16,000
square meters.
The conclusion following over a year of production in China
is that the startup has been a success. We are happy with the
quality of the products being manufactured at this site, as is the
Chinese market. In the financial year just ended, we roughly
tripled sales of folders specially assembled for the local market,
selling over 100 machines.
The first small-format presses are now rolling off the
assembly line and preparations are under way for assembling a press
the next size up for the Chinese market.
Ladies and Gentlemen
As things stand at present, the external economic conditions
and our planned progress in terms of products, costs and the market
provide a sound basis for financial year 2007/2008.
Prospects for financial year 2007/2008
Ladies and Gentlemen
Now for our prospects, which we have readjusted.
Over the next three-year period, from 2007/2008 to 2009/2010,
we are expecting the Heidelberg Group's total sales to increase by
ten to 15 percent. In the current financial year 2007/2008, we
predict moderate growth in the run-up to drupa 2008.
In 2006/2007, the year under review, the operating result
included positive non-recurring items amounting to around 60
million Euro. In the current financial year 2007/2008, Heidelberg
is looking to increase the purely operational part of this result
by ten to 15 percent compared to the adjusted figure for the year
under review of 302 million Euro. This represents a target
operating result for 2007/2008 of 330 to 345 million Euro.
Benefiting from the positive effects of the German tax reform
and from internal optimizations to ease the tax burden, the net
profit will continue to grow. Overall, we predict an increase in
this profit - excluding non-recurring items - of around four
percent of sales for the year under review to about five percent in
the current financial year 2007/2008.
As always, we are keen for our shareholders to share in the
company's success and increase in value with a healthy rise in
share dividends.
Ladies and Gentlemen
As demonstrated by these key figures, Heidelberg has
maintained and extended its lead in the print industry.
Thanks to the order backlog and the demand for our innovative
products, we are entering the new financial year 2007/2008 full of
confidence.
In the coming 12 months, we will be working hard towards the
drupa trade fair in May 2008 so that Heidelberg can once again
offer its customers new solutions for greater innovation and
productivity.
My colleague Dirk Kaliebe will now discuss the results for
financial year 2006/2007 in detail.
Thank you very much for your time.