Cartrack says there has been no spike in cancellations owing to Covid-19

29th May 2020 By: Irma Venter - Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

Cartrack CEO Zak Calisto is confident the asset management and workforce optimisation company will be able to weather the current Covid-19 storm, provided “the storm doesn’t last forever”.

“We have been able to deliver a high level of service to all our customers, despite the economic disruptions caused by Covid-19,” he noted earlier this month as he presented the company’s financial results for the year ended February 29.

That said, Calisto did expect Cartrack’s 2021 financial results to be impacted on by the global slowdown, owing to numerous global Covid-19 lockdowns.

The disruption caused by the pandemic would affect new additions to its subscriber base in the first quarter of the current financial year, with a 35% decline in March and April this year, compared with the same period last year. The company also did not plan for any growth in subscription revenue, compared with the last quarter of the previous financial year.

“We also plan for weaker new subscriber additions for the first half of the financial year,” said Calisto.

“We have, however, seen no spike in subscriber cancellations and, as at the end of April, we have 14 659 additional subscribers, underpinning the thesis that our high level of service remains essential to our customers.”

Calisto said Cartrack had a clean balance sheet, that it was generating strong cash flows and operating with “industry-leading margins”, providing it with “a level of operating safety”.

He added that Cartrack could perhaps benefit from the pandemic, which “might have brought forward the digitalisation of the world”.

Cartrack continued its positive run in the 2020 financial year, delivering a 28% jump in operating profit to R642-million.

The company, which operates in 23 countries and five continents, also reported an operating profit margin of 33%.

Other financials appear equally healthy, with subscription revenue increasing by 24% to R1.89-billion, compared with the previous financial year.

Subscription revenue made up 97% of total revenue, up from 90%, with regions outside Africa growing subscription revenue by 30% year-on-year.

The number of subscribers grew by 17% to 1.127-million.

Total revenue increased by 15% to R1.94-billion.

Cartrack declared a final cash dividend per share of 54c, with a full-year dividend of 74c.

Cartrack’s South Africa business remained the prominent revenue contributor during the year under review, delivering revenue growth of 14% to reach R1.4-billion, with a subscriber growth of 17%.

Global subscription revenue (outside South Africa) accounted for 27% of total revenue, at R504-million, up from 6% in the 2014 financial year.

A restructured African business (excluding South Africa) saw a 7% increase in subscribers.

The Africa business continued to play a critical role in ensuring a high level of service to South African customers who were increasingly doing cross-border business, noted Calisto.

“We have been pretty flat in Africa for the last four . . . five years.”

Asia-Pacific is now Cartrack’s second-largest revenue contributor and the fastest-growing segment in the group. This region saw a 30% increase in subscribers.

The European segment delivered 20% subscriber growth.

Calisto said the company should expand further into Europe in the second half of the current financial year.

He noted that Asia and Europe presented “really big opportunities” for Cartrack going into the future.