ST Engineering's net profit dips 6% to $103.4m

Aerospace, Land System, and Marine segments were lacklustre in Q1.

Singapore Technologies Engineering failed to shine this quarter with its weak aerospace, land system, and marine segments.

For the past quarter, ST Engineering posted a revenue decline of 5.4% to $1.5b. This came with the declines in the headline of the three segments mentioned above, OCBC Investment Research said.

Whilst its gross profit went up 8.6% to $317.2m, net profit declined 6% to $103.4m. This is due to a 47% drop in other income as a result of lower wage credit and a 39.2% decline in share of results from associates and JVs. However, It was offset by a 55.5% fall in net finance costs for the quarter.

Here's more from OCBC Investment Research:

By key business sectors, STE’s 1Q17 group PBT margin rose 1.0ppt YoY to 9.4%, lifted mainly by improvements at its aerospace sector (+2.0ppt) due to higher contribution from the EFW and Marine sector (+3.4ppt) on better performance from shipbuilding from both U.S. and local operations.

Consequently, as tax expenses rose 37.7% YoY to S$27.0m, 1Q17 PATMI missed our expectations as it declined 6.1% to S$103.4m, which formed 20% of our FY17 forecast. Looking ahead, STE is guiding for FY17 revenue to be comparable, while PBT is expected to be higher than that of FY16, respectively.
 

Join Singapore Business Review community
A NOTE FROM SINGAPORE BUSINESS REVIEW

The people you want to reach are already in this room.

Every quarter, SBR lands on the desks of the founders, CFOs, and directors running Asia's most consequential companies. Every day, they open our newsletter and read our website. It's a room that took twenty years to build — and it's the one most of our partners are trying to get into.

The good news is that the door is open. We work with companies on thought leadership articles, sponsored content, industry summits across Southeast Asia, regional awards programmes, podcasts, and media placements in print and digital. The shape of the right partnership depends on what you're trying to do, which is why we'd rather start with a conversation than send a rate card.


If you have something this room should know about, tell us. We'll tell you honestly whether we can help, and how.

No rate cards until we understand the brief. It's a better use of everyone's time.

Exclusives

Singapore, Hong Kong take rival paths to capture global gold trade
One builds MAS-backed vaulting for central banks, the other opens a pipeline to Shanghai.
Monday.com picks Singapore for Southeast Asia expansion
Its in-house designers created Singapore-inspired artwork in the company's colors.
Tsuklio targets dual-income families in Singapore expansion
The Japanese meal subscription platform logged 3,000 pre-registrations before launch.