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Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Group CEO An­tho­ny Sab­ga III:

ANSA McAL looking to $2B profit by ‘27

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733 days ago
20230518
Some of the directors of the ANSA McAL board at the group’s annual meeting on May 12—from left, Larry Howai, ANSA McAL Group Chief Executive Officer Anthony N Sabga III, Vicki-Ann Assevero, Norman Sabga, Executive Chairman of the ANSA McAL Group, Andrew Sabga , Ray Sumairsingh, Teresa White and Mark Morgan.

Some of the directors of the ANSA McAL board at the group’s annual meeting on May 12—from left, Larry Howai, ANSA McAL Group Chief Executive Officer Anthony N Sabga III, Vicki-Ann Assevero, Norman Sabga, Executive Chairman of the ANSA McAL Group, Andrew Sabga , Ray Sumairsingh, Teresa White and Mark Morgan.

ABRAHAM DIAZ

ANSA McAL is look­ing to be­come a group that gen­er­ates prof­it be­fore tax of $2 bil­lion by 2027 and has es­tab­lished 2X as the in­ter­nal ral­ly­ing cry for the plan.

So said ANSA McAL’s group CEO, An­tho­ny Sab­ga III in an in­ter­view with Guardian Me­dia, fol­low­ing the com­pa­ny’s an­nu­al meet­ing, which was held Fri­day last at the Radis­son Ho­tel in Port of Spain.

Sab­ga said what 2X rep­re­sents for the group is the pos­si­bil­i­ty of dou­bling its busi­ness in the next five years.

“Dur­ing the course of 2022, the lead­er­ship team of ANSA McAL went in­to re­treat. We start­ed re­view­ing and look­ing at the pos­si­ble items in our pipeline that we saw avail­able to us.

“The cul­mi­na­tion of that process is dri­ving the pos­si­bil­i­ty of a $2 bil­lion prof­it in the next five years,” said Sab­ga, adding: “We ex­pect that by 2027 the group would be a $2 bil­lion prof­it be­fore tax com­pa­ny.”

To achieve the goal of $2 bil­lion prof­it be­fore tax by 2027, the group has a pipeline of var­i­ous projects and ini­tia­tives, some of which are al­ready un­der­way.

“As you would have seen, there are a cou­ple very strate­gic ac­qui­si­tions that have al­ready come in­to the pipeline. There are a cou­ple oth­ers (still to come).

“There are ad­di­tion­al­ly a se­ries of or­gan­ic growth projects, all of which would cre­ate that ob­jec­tive.”

He said the com­pa­ny would need to more than dou­ble its rev­enue to achieve the goal of dou­bling its prof­it be­fore tax by 2027, “but large­ly this would be an ef­fi­cien­cy and prof­itabil­i­ty item.”

He said the tar­get would in­volv­ing go­ing in­to new coun­tries and new mar­kets.

“We have al­ready gone be­yond our Trinida­di­an shores and we have al­ready gone well be­yond our re­gion­al shores. As you know, we have made in­vest­ments in the US.

“We will con­tin­ue to do so. We have in­vest­ments south in Guyana. We have in­vest­ments in Cos­ta Ri­ca, the Do­mini­can Re­pub­lic and we are cer­tain­ly look­ing at oth­er ex­tra-re­gion­al ju­ris­dic­tions with hemi­spher­ic pos­si­bil­i­ties,” said the ANSA McAL group CEO.

Asked about fund­ing of the growth ini­tia­tives, Sab­ga said: “We have a fair­ly clean and ro­bust bal­ance sheet. So our bal­ance sheet will pro­vide quite a lot of the monies re­quired for the growth ini­tia­tives.

“Where that pos­si­bil­i­ty does not ex­ist, we have the op­por­tu­ni­ty as a pub­licly trad­ed com­pa­ny to go to the mar­ket where need­ed. We al­so have a very sig­nif­i­cant amount of cash in trea­sury re­serves, so we are well po­si­tioned to use var­i­ous fund­ing mech­a­nisms to get these things done.”

With to­tal as­sets of $17.6 bil­lion (US$2.61 bil­lion) at the end of 2022, ANSA McAL is one of the largest, pub­licly list­ed, in­dige­nous con­glom­er­ates in the Eng­lish-speak­ing Caribbean.

The group com­pris­es 48 com­pa­nies in over eight ter­ri­to­ries, and it of­fers its brands, prod­ucts and ser­vices in over 30 mar­kets across the world, em­ploy­ing close to 6,000 peo­ple.

Dur­ing the an­nu­al meet­ing, Sab­ga called on sev­er­al of the group’s sec­tor heads and man­ag­ing di­rec­tors to make short pre­sen­ta­tions to the share­hold­ers at the meet­ing.

ANSA Mer­chant Bank’s man­ag­ing di­rec­tor, Gre­go­ry Hill re­called that the fi­nan­cial in­sti­tu­tion made a num­ber of sig­nif­i­cant ac­qui­si­tions in the last three years.

ANSA Mer­chant com­plet­ed the ac­qui­si­tion of 100 per cent of Colfire, the gen­er­al in­sur­ance com­pa­ny that was un­der the con­trol of the CL Fi­nan­cial liq­uida­tors, in April 2023.

The Cen­tral Bank ap­proved ANSA Mer­chant’s ac­qui­si­tion of the Bank of Bar­o­da in No­vem­ber 2020. The com­mer­cial bank was re­named ANSA Bank and start­ed op­er­at­ing un­der that name in March 2021.

“I am very hap­py to say that since the ac­qui­si­tion of the Bank of Bar­o­da and the launch of ANSA Bank, we have seen a 210 per cent in­crease in our loan book, a 220 per cent in­crease in de­posits, a dou­bling of our bal­ance sheet size and cus­tomer ac­qui­si­tion grow­ing rapid­ly month on month,” Hill told the meet­ing.

In its first quar­ter re­sults, which were pub­lished on Mon­day, ANSA Mer­chant re­port­ed a 49 per cent in­crease in its rev­enue, which jumped to $256.5 mil­lion in the three months end­ed March 31, 2023, from $172.2 mil­lion in the same quar­ter in 2022.

The com­pa­ny al­so record­ed an in­crease in its con­sol­i­dat­ed prof­it be­fore tax for the quar­ter of $59.1 mil­lion, which was 252 per cent greater than the $39.8 mil­lion loss in the first quar­ter of 2022.

ANSA McAL owns 82.5 per cent of ANSA Mer­chant, which is al­so list­ed on the Trinidad and To­ba­go Stock Ex­change.

Andy Ma­hadeo, the man­u­fac­tur­ing head of ANSA McAL, told the an­nu­al meet­ing that his sec­tor has ex­cit­ing plans that are al­ready in train or soon to be re­vealed.

The man­u­fac­tur­ing sec­tor is di­vid­ed in­to pack­ag­ing and util­i­ties. Un­der pack­ag­ing is Carib Glass and ANSA Poly­mer.

Un­der the util­i­ties group is the chem­i­cals busi­ness, which man­u­fac­tures prod­ucts for wa­ter treat­ment.

The man­u­fac­tur­ing sec­tor is al­so in re­new­able en­er­gy gen­er­a­tion “as the group owns a wind farm in Cos­ta Ri­ca and a so­lar farm in the Do­mini­can Re­pub­lic,” said Ma­hadeo.

He said the man­u­fac­tur­ing arm of ANSA McAL is un­der­go­ing a 50 per cent ex­pan­sion of its chlor-al­ka­li (chlo­rine) plant “be­cause we have sold out the ca­pac­i­ty and we are chas­ing more mar­ket share in the re­gion.”

He said once that ex­pan­sion is com­plet­ed, the plant should con­trol about 85 per cent of re­gion­al de­mand for chlor-al­ka­li.

As a re­sult, the com­pa­ny has re­quest­ed a Com­mon Ex­ter­nal Tar­iff (CET) from Ju­ly 1, 2023, which means all ex­tra-re­gion­al im­ports of chlo­rine from that date will at­tract a 10 per cent du­ty.

“We have ex­pand­ed our foot­print by putting a chlo­rine hub in Ja­maica and be­cause of that we re­cent­ly won the chlo­rine sup­ply for all of Ja­maica,” said Ma­hadeo.

He said the man­u­fac­tur­ing arm of ANSA McAL is now look­ing for hemi­spher­ic ex­pan­sion in­to chem­i­cals, with a trip planned for Ju­ly to look in­to a “huge” chlor-al­ka­li busi­ness.

The sec­tor has al­so start­ed the due dili­gence for an­oth­er ac­qui­si­tion.

“Hope­ful­ly with­in the next cou­ple years we will be­come a glob­al play­er in the chlor-al­ka­li space,” said Ma­hadeo.

ANSA McAL’s man­u­fac­tur­ing arm is al­so ex­pand­ing the so­lar park in the Do­mini­can Re­pub­lic and is ac­tive­ly look­ing at new in­vest­ments in the so­lar space.

Pe­ter Hall, the bev­er­age sec­tor head, told the meet­ing: “As a key part of ANSA McAL, the group will not be able to dou­ble it­self, if Carib brew­ery and our bev­er­age busi­ness can­not as well.

“So we ac­cept our part in the plan and we in­tend to dou­ble the val­ue of our en­ter­prise in the next five years.

“We cur­rent­ly have a foot­print of four brew­eries—in Trinidad, Grena­da, St Kitts and Flori­da—and 25 ex­port coun­tries.

“We ex­pect over the com­ing decade that that num­ber of brew­eries with­in our busi­ness will grow and we think ul­ti­mate­ly reach­ing prob­a­bly around ten brew­eries.”

Oth­er man­ag­ing di­rec­tors and sec­tor heads made pre­sen­ta­tions out­lin­ing the group’s fu­ture prospects.


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