Nampak Gets Kick From Can Demand, But Profits Take Foreign Exchange Hit

Loading player...
Erik Smuts – Nampak CEO Talks about “in 2022 we faced some operational headwinds while leveraging the available tailwinds. the sa beverage can market experienced unprecedented growth; and volumes in angola during the last quarter grew by almost 30%, exceeding our expectations.”



he added, “revenue increased by 21%, lifted by higher volumes and unusually high commodity prices. despite the strong contributions from our beverage cans and liquid paper businesses to a pleasing trading profit, an increase in foreign exchange losses, higher interest rates and increased impairments contributed to a lower net profitability.” 



smuts noted that efforts to dispose of certain assets yielded no tangible results preventing nampak from reducing debt and required the extension of certain maturity dates and relaxation of covenants.  nampak will approach shareholders for approval for a rights issue. he said, “with a strengthened balance sheet, we can focus on our operations to leverage growth opportunities for the benefit of our stakeholders.” 



in the 2022 financial year, nampak delivered strong revenue growth of 21% (r16.9bn), underpinned by stronger volumes in our sa beverage can market, angola, nigeria and zimbabwe. despite challenging trading conditions green shoots of recovery were evident in some markets. trading profit improved 13% to r1.6bn as the pass-through pricing mechanisms in most of our businesses allowed for the recovery of increased input costs, but without the recovery of the incremental cost of funding the higher working capital, group trading margins declined to 9.5% from 10.2% in the prior year. 



stringent overhead management was applied in an inflationary environment. we focused on improving our trading performance and were pleased with the strong recovery in the beverage can operations, however these were diluted by a disappointing result from divfood and the impact of the depreciation of the zimbabwe dollar on the rand-reported results of our zimbabwe operations. 



cost of sales was impacted by high metals prices, due to challenging supply chains with concomitant increases in logistics and shipping costs. operating profit was assisted by a moderate 1% decrease in core employee costs, complemented by strong trading results from bevcan sa and nigeria, and a recovery in bevcan angola. our zimbabwe operations continued to perform well and remained self-funding. a once-off insurance loss of r50 million was incurred.
5 Dec 2022 1PM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

Jetour T2 Makes History: How a Newcomer Won SA Car of the Year

For the first time in 40 years, a Chinese brand has taken South Africa’s top automotive honour. The Jetour T2 beat 55 contenders to win Car of the Year 2026. Vice President for Jetour South Africa Nic Campbell explains what set the T2 apart, why Chinese brands are rising so…
5 Jun 5AM 11 min

Retail Rebound: NIQ Unpacks SA’s Surprising Q1 Consumer Surge

South Africans spent R173.6 billion on FMCG goods in Q1 — with volumes up 9.1%. Snacks, beverages and tobacco surged, while baby food and care declined. NIQ’s Lané Klopper breaks down the drivers behind the rebound, the rise of traditional trade, and why inflation may tighten the screws again in…
5 Jun 5AM 12 min

Canal+ Lists on the JSE: What It Signals for SA’s Capital Markets

JSE Capital Markets Chief Helina Andhee breaks down the significance of Canal+’s new listing and what it reveals about South Africa’s evolving listings environment. We explore liquidity, innovation, delistings vs. new entrants, and the JSE’s strategy to attract global issuers in a competitive capital markets landscape.
3 Jun 3PM 15 min

Beyond the Rate Hike: Fuel Shocks, Credit Stress & SA’s Financial Fragility

TransUnion Africa CEO Lee Naik analyzes how rising rates, fuel spikes, and deepening credit stress are reshaping household finances. We unpack a 14% collapse in fuel buying power, soaring non‑bank loan delinquencies, and why the new withdrawal system may offer less relief than expected. A data‑driven guide to absorb, adapt,…
3 Jun 3PM 13 min

Can BRICS Absorb SA’s Confidence Shock? Advocate Xulu on Trade

BRICS Business Council’s Advocate Mtho Xulu joins us to discuss South Africa’s widening BRICS trade deficit, the urgent need to shift from raw exports to value-added manufacturing, and whether BRICS-Plus markets can help offset domestic demand weakness. A strategic look at SA’s place in a rapidly shifting global trade environment.
3 Jun 2PM 11 min