Italy's Leonardo posts lower Q1 profits, but orders rise

Reuters

Published May 03, 2023 17:03

Updated May 03, 2023 19:21

By Alvise Armellini

ROME (Reuters) - Italy's state-controlled defence and aerospace group Leonardo on Wednesday posted lower first-quarter profits and earnings, but reported a jump in orders and backlog, and confirmed financial targets for 2023.

CEO Alessandro Profumo also said Germany's Hensoldt, in which Leonardo has a 25% stake, would not be buying his company's defence electronics business, as was suggested last month by Hensoldt CEO Thomas Mueller.

Profumo said there might be a "combination" in the sector but this would be "conceptually different from an acquisition," and he called Mueller's comments "an unfortunate misunderstanding".

Leonardo's Q1 profit stood at 40 million euros ($44.2 million) compared to 72 million euros 12 months earlier, while earnings before interest, taxes and amortisation (EBITA) fell year-on-year by 20.5% to 105 million euros.

Revenues were broadly flat at around 3 billion euros, while new orders rose by 28.5% year-on-year to almost 4.9 billion euros "in particular thanks to the excellent performance of helicopters," the company said in a statement.

Order backlog rose in the same period by 7.9% to 39.1 billion euros, equal to more than 2.5 years of production, while net debt fell to 3.7 billion euros as of end-March, down by 1.1 billion year-on-year, thanks to stronger cash generation.

Nevertheless, results were below analysts' expectations.

In a company-provided consensus forecast, they had expected a quarterly net profit of 48 million euros and EBITA of 120 million euros, but revenues were correctly predicted at around the 3-billion-euro mark.

Profumo said the company remained "solid" and well positioned to capture growth opportunities at a time of rising European defence spending due to the Ukraine war.

Leonardo confirmed its 2023 targets including new orders at around 17 billion euros, revenues in the 15 billion-15.6 billion euro range, EBITA at 1.26-1.31 billion euros and group net debt of about 2.6 billion euros.