Final Results

Quarto Group Inc 20 February 2008 THE QUARTO GROUP, INC Preliminary Announcement - Year to December 31, 2007 Quarto (QRT.l) the fully-listed international specialist book publisher based in London, announces improved headline and underlying results, in spite of a weaker economy in its core US market and adverse currency movement. Laurence Orbach (Chairman & CEO) stated: 'We have delivered a very solid set of 2007 results. 'For our co-edition titles, the forward order book is stronger than it was at this time last year. The Publishing segment, by its nature, sells from inventory and does not have such forward visibility, but, even allowing for the lingering problems in the US housing and associated markets, we expect a solid performance for the Group in 2008. We have strong publishing programs in place and, with a healthy backlist of titles, and greater visibility and availability for these through internet retailers, we feel comfortable that Quarto is in good shape to weather the head winds that may blow. 'In 2007, operating profit (before amortization of non-current intangibles and non-recurring items) exceeded 10% of revenue, and we are striving towards a new target of 12.5%.' Financial Highlights Year to December 31 2007 2006 Increase Revenue (£m) 100.1 93.6 +7% Adjusted EBITDA (£m) 20.0 18.0 +11% Operating profit: adjusted (£m) 10.6 9.6 +10% reported (£m) 9.6 6.9 +39% Pre-tax profit: adjusted (£m) 7.7 7.3 +5% reported (£m) 6.7 4.6 +45% Diluted earnings per share: adjusted (p) 24.4 22.5 +8% reported (p) 21.1 13.9 +52% Dividends per share (p) 7.15 6.75 +6% Net debt (£m) reported (£m) 43.4 31.0 +40% underlying (£m) 25.4 31.0 -18% Adjusted excludes amortization of non-current intangibles and non-recurring items Underlying excludes the cash outflow in respect of acquisitions •Accelerating growth: Adjusted operating profit rose 10% to £10.6 million (2006: £9.6 million) on revenue growth of 7% to £100.1 million (2006: £93.6 million); adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) increased by 11% to £20.0 million (2006: £18.0 million); adjusted profit before tax up by 5% to £7.7 million (2006: £7.3 million) - a seventh successive annual increase; proposed final dividend up by 7% to 4.00p (2006: 3.75p), making a total for the year of 7.15p (2006: 6.75p). Diluted, adjusted earnings per share were 24.4p (2006: 22.5p),an increase of 8%. Statutory reported operating profit rose by 39% to £9.6 million (2006: £6.9 million), and basic earnings per share were 21.6p (2006: 14.3p), an increase of 51%. •Balance Sheet: Bank facilities of $165 million committed to 2012 and beyond; strong cash generation; receivables days reduced; inventories well controlled; net debt, following the $35.1 million acquisition of MBI Publishing in August, is substantially better than forecast at £43.4 million (2006: £31.0 million). •The Publishing segment, the main focus of Quarto's growth strategy, amply validated this approach, with operating profits jumping 23% to £6.4 million on sales up 12% to £61.7 million, benefiting from the acquisition of MBI •The International Co-Edition Publishing segment produced another robust performance, with underlying operating profit 1% ahead at £5.3 million on headline revenues of £38.4 million that on an underlying, constant currency basis were up 6% at £40.7 million. •The $35.1 million acquisition in August 2007 of MBI Publishing, the leading US publisher of books for transport enthusiasts, was Quarto's largest ever. MBI traded as expected in the last four months of 2007 and is now located with Quarto's CPi publishing imprint, a specialist in home improvement, in new facilities in downtown Minneapolis. Enquiries: The Quarto Group, Inc. 020-7700 9004 Laurence Orbach (Chairman & CEO) Mick Mousley (Finance Director) Bankside Consultants Limited 020-7367 8851 Charles Ponsonby CHAIRMAN'S LETTER Dear Shareholder: We have delivered a very solid set of 2007 results. It seemed likely, in the early part of the year, that our CPi publishing imprint, producing titles on home improvement, would feel some effect from the fragile housing market in the United States. This duly transpired as the year progressed. By the early summer, the damage had spread beyond housing and widely enough to temper private equity's voracious appetite, giving us the opportunity to acquire MBI Publishing. Our largest acquisition to date, MBI, the leading US publisher of books for transport enthusiasts, strengthens our strategy of producing books for audiences of enthusiasts and professionals, and leveraging our infrastructure to achieve improvements in overall financial performance. It also cements our substantial presence in the US domestic publishing market. Summary of Financial Performance For the year ended December 31, 2007, revenues rose by 7% to £100.1 million (2006: £93.6 million). Adjusted operating profit rose by 10% to £10.6 million (2006: £9.6 million); profit before tax, on the same basis, of £7.7 million (2006: £7.3 million) increased by 5%; and diluted, adjusted earnings per share were 24.4p (2006: 22.5p), an increase of 8%. Adjusted EBITDA were £20.0 million (2006: £18.0 million), an increase of 11%. Cash generation was strong; underlying net debt was down by £5.6 million to £25.4 million (2006: £31.0 million), excluding the cost of the acquisition of MBI. Earnings are strongly ahead of last year and prospects are promising, so your board is recommending a final dividend of 4.00p (2006: 3.75p) per share, making a total dividend for the year of 7.15p (2006: 6.75p) per share, an increase of 6%, to be paid on June 5, 2008 to shareholders on the register on May 2, 2008. Basic earnings per share were 21.6p (2006: 14.3p), an increase of 51%. While this is a very flattering increase, 2006's earnings were impacted adversely by a large bad debt. A reconciliation of the above figures is given in Note 5. The US dollar remains Quarto's principal trading currency. We continue to report our results in sterling and I have to remind readers that the average dollar rate for 2007 was £1=$2.00, a fall of almost 9% from the prior year's. Against the background of a weaker economy in our core market, and adverse currency movement, we are delighted to be able to announce improved headline and underlying results. Corporate Activity As mentioned above, we were successful in an auction to buy MBI Publishing, and closed the deal at the end of last August. MBI is the leading US publisher of books for transport enthusiasts (automobiles, motorcycles, trucks, aviation, etc.), and the major US distributor for a number of overseas, predominantly UK-based publishers of specialist transport titles; it also publishes a respected range of military history and militaria titles under the Zenith Press imprint, and a more general list of regional, outdoor activity, sport, and special interest titles under the Voyageur Press imprint. The purchase, which was financed from our lines of credit, cost $35.1 million, including costs and the assumption of MBI's debt. In June, we renewed and enlarged our 5-year syndicated revolving credit facility, increasing it from $90 million to $115 million which, together with the 8-year Note sold to Pricoa in December 2006, provides us with $165 million of facilities committed to the middle of 2012 and beyond. We have hedged the interest rate on the major part of the funds we have drawn. We also have further bilateral facilities outside these two arrangements. The acquisition of MBI demonstrated to potential vendors that we were active and, with our strong financing arrangements, we have scope to continue our quest for opportunities to add selectively to our portfolio of publishing businesses. Review of Trading Quarto's International Co-Edition Publishing segment produced another robust performance, achieving a strong underlying operating profit margin of 13.6% (2006: 13.7%) on headline revenues of £38.4 million that, on an underlying, constant currency basis, were up 6% at £40.7 million (2006: £38.4 million). The underlying operating profit was 1% ahead at £5.3 million (2006: £5.3 million). As is the norm, the percentage of revenues from books published in prior years remained very high, at 68% (2006: 70%). This was down slightly on the prior year because more new titles were published during the year. Foreign language sales in Europe were down on the very strong 2006 performance, but this was more a reflection of timing than of market conditions. The Publishing segment, the main focus of our growth strategy, amply validated this approach, with operating profits jumping 23% to £6.4 million (2006: £5.2 million) on sales up 12% to £61.7 million (2006: £55.2 million), thanks to the acquisition of MBI. Publishing is largely a domestic activity, in contrast to the broad global reach of our co-edition publishing segment. Our main publishing imprints and markets are in the United States, followed by Australasia. Adjusted operating profit exceeded 10% of revenues, for the first time, and we are striving towards a new target of 12.5%. Reprint revenues continue to underpin the business model, with 59% (2006: 59%) of the sales of our book publishing units being derived from titles published in prior years. For the last four months of 2007, MBI traded as expected and, during this period, while obtaining space in Minneapolis in which to combine our two Minneapolis-based publishing units, we also started work on a lengthy project to integrate some of the routine back office functions of our entire US publishing businesses and build an infrastructure upon which further growth can be based. We now occupy completely renovated loft space in downtown Minneapolis, ideal for our purposes and also containing a capacious, 10,000 square feet photography studio, which is used to build sets for our illustrated instructional how-to books. Prospects Looking backwards, it now seems to have been inevitable that there was always going to be a strong correction in the financial markets. Whatever the causes, be they excessive pump priming by the Federal Reserve, the slow and growing tendency for consumers in the United States to take on ever more debt (although not quite to the greater extent that they have done in the UK!) in the hope that the world had moved into a benign, and never-ending, period of low inflation and productivity growth, the ill-advised 'war on terror' undertaken by an overstretched superpower that could only see itself as a force for good in the world, or a myriad of other possible explanations, something of a day of reckoning seems to have arrived. As of this writing, large and powerful economies doubt that they will be infected significantly - the Eurozone countries, the BRIC countries, and Australasia, among others - but this may represent the triumph of hope over reality. I suspect that the contagion will spread, and that it would be imprudent not to point out that while all goes well for Quarto, we cannot expect immunity from volatile and uncertain markets and economies. What does this mean for Quarto's short-term prospects? Without the new media that have become commonplace over the last decade, we would use history as a guide; remembering, of course, the obligatory government health warning that the experience of the past may not necessarily be a guide to the future. For, in the past, book sales did rather well in recessions, offering good value for instruction, information, and entertainment. Does the emergence of the new media, many of which make available similar offerings, apparently 'for free', dismiss this happy likelihood? As I have pointed out frequently, in previous letters, all successful new media have made inroads on existing media by exploiting the unique capabilities, characteristics, and rhythms of a new medium. While new media remain competition for the consumer's dollar, they may have only passing impact on old media, by forcing it to invent a new business model in order to survive as, no doubt, the music industry is experiencing at the moment. Can anybody seriously imagine that there will be no music industry and it will not re-emerge from its current travails? What is far more likely is that the industry will indulge in collective navel gazing, regroup, and shift its focus, groping towards a new business model that allow performers and creators of music to profit and disseminate music widely using the multiple channels. The book publishing business, over a very long period, has consistently survived the predations of most other media and prophesies of its imminent demise; the movie industry has adapted itself to the emergence of television, cable, videotapes and DVDs; and so it is likely to continue, but there are no guarantees. Quarto remains on the lookout for opportunities to monetize its deep reservoir of content. So far, the one promising digital direction we have exploited is to make a subset of some our material available online to libraries and their subscribers in the United States, through a fee-based library supply vendor. It's a useful source of additional revenue, but firmly grounded in a traditional distribution channel. It may be inevitable that, in their relentless search for advantage, professionals in the investment industry have much to gain by dramatizing commercial change. They search for growth and for decline, and it's easy and vaguely plausible to posit that growth in some areas will cause decline elsewhere, as if the economy were in perfect balance. It's not, of course and, while new media may offer explosive growth and create temporary disruption, the decline in existing media is only relative to the larger pot of media. And so it is with books, i.e. the book publishing industry may represent a smaller piece of the overall media industry, but it still grows at slightly ahead of the rate of inflation. As of now it remains unclear whether book publishers will be able to derive significant new sources of revenue from digitization. Should this come to pass, Quarto is well placed to be a major beneficiary, as so much of Quarto's content has been self-generated, and the revenue stream will not have to be shared with others. Nor is it guaranteed that all 'new media' will root in the fertile soil of the internet: at some point, finance has to be available to support new, or nearly new, forms of media, much as advertising and license fees and cable subscriptions have offset the cost of producing content for newspapers and television. One must remember that content has been 'nearly' free in other media for a very long time, and the internet does not, in that respect, represent a revolution. In contrast, as an unsubsidized medium, book publishing has found its way past the rocky shoals, prospering by appealing only occasionally and successfully to really large mass audiences (a la Harry Potter), and mostly to tiny minorities with special interests and enthusiasms. Since the emergence of other media, books have been a regular purchase in most countries by only a very small minority of consumers and, if anything, book purchasers are growing, thanks to the wider dissemination of books through outlets such as supermarkets, speciality stores and, particularly, internet retailers. A very recent Nielsen Online study shows that books are, across the globe, the most popular online buy, with 58% of South Korean users buying books online. And the trend is increasing. Even in the United States, with its abundant book superstores, and the UK, respectively 38% and 45% of internet users have bought books online, a far higher number of consumers than used to buy books before the internet began. If further evidence were needed that Quarto operates in a continually growing industry, it comes from the recently released study by the Association of American Publishers, which confirms that book sales through all channels increased by 7.4% in 2007. We can expect to see continued nervousness and disruption in book retailing, which feeds back into how Quarto, and other publishers, plan content production. This represents a mighty challenge, one that Quarto is well placed to address. If only the UK and US are currently feeling the immediate impact of the internet and substantial book sales by non-book retailers, the ripple effect will travel into other markets before long. Our strategy is to remain as producers and publishers of books for enthusiasts and professionals across the globe, translated and, if necessary, adapted for local audiences in even more than the 43 languages we license our books in now, all produced to very high standards. For our co-edition titles, the forward order book is stronger than it was at this time last year. The publishing segment, by its nature, sells from inventory, and does not have such forward visibility but, even allowing for lingering problems in the housing and associated markets, we expect a solid performance for the group in 2008. We have strong publishing programs in place and, with a healthy backlist of titles, and greater visibility and availability for these through internet retailers, we feel comfortable that Quarto is in good shape to weather the head winds that may blow (as the Wall Street Journal recently noted in an article, nautical metaphors seem now to be raging in corporate releases). We remain well funded and very hopeful that, if private equity's romance with media cools, Quarto may be better able to execute on its strategy of making selective acquisitions. Quarto is a portfolio business, recognizes that organic growth will be slow, and sometimes may only be successful in replacing declining imprints, and that acquisitions of appropriate publishing imprints will help drive ever better returns for shareholders. I take this opportunity to thank our staff, our contributors, our bankers and advisers who, together with the board of directors, have provided the essential support to make 2007 a successful year. Sincerely Laurence F Orbach Chairman and Chief Executive Officer London, February 20, 2008 REVIEW OF OPERATIONS International Co-Edition Book Publishing 2007 was a productive and successful first full year for our Quintessence unit, with revenues up by 12%, and it is set to grow even more quickly in 2008 as its client base broadens, and its range of series-oriented titles increases. During the year, the phenomenally successful 1001 series hit new heights in terms of quality and profile: in the US, 1001 Buildings was showcased in Barnes & Noble stores in 50 states; in Australia, 1001 Classical Recordings was cross-promoted with an accompanying audio CD in all ABC bookstore outlets; while in the UK, Waterstones ran a nationwide promotion that generated 28,000 sales in the two weeks before Christmas. Unwavering focus has helped the brand achieve unprecedented credibility, with UNESCO pleased to be invited to collaborate on 1001 Historic Sites to See before You Die, the 10th title in the series, while worldwide press and blog coverage for all titles accumulates at pace. 2007 also saw the launch of the first two series spin-offs, 501 Movie Stars and 501 Movie Directors, while the third and final layer in the 1001 book pyramid will launch in 2008. Far from resting on his laurels, however, publisher Tristan de Lancey is already well advanced with plans for two new series to take over where 1001 leaves off, and thus capitalize on Quintessence's unique brand-led, co-edition hybrid status by applying tried and tested disciplines to ensure this success continues for years to come. QED, Quarto's educational publishing unit, came of age in 2007, under the watchful guidance of founding publisher Steve Evans. Four years of steadily increasing sales and profitability culminated in a record result, both on the top line and in operating profit. Sales grew in most channels: by 51% in English language co-edition, with particular successes in the US warehouse club and display marketing segments; by 17% in the UK self-published segment; and by 12% in the North American Library market. Two areas of disappointment - export and foreign language co-edition sales - have been addressed through the recruitment of additional sales resources to concentrate on emerging markets in Eastern Europe, where there is a hunger for high quality educational content. 2008's publishing program has been carefully researched to ensure maximum alignment with educational trends, and reflects increased use of 'hi-lo' reading schemes - books with high visual and subject interest, but with a low reading-age level, designed to encourage reluctant readers. QED is now being shown a new respect by its competitors, while at the same time major customers are increasing their order levels, reflecting a greater confidence in the brand's reputation for creative freshness and educational authority. After two very strong years in 2005 and 2006, Quarto Adults experienced a downturn in sales in 2007. Over-optimistic scheduling meant that a number of new titles failed to meet their year-end shipping deadlines, and the weak dollar translated into lower revenues all round. Despite this, US reprint sales remained robust, confirming the continuing steady retail demand for Quarto books, and sales in the UK held up well, thanks to our focus on specialist titles licensed to very able publishers who have managed to sidestep the general retail downturn. Foreign language sales started the year slowly, but a barnstorming finish saw them end with gross margins increased. European hits included 100 Characters from Classical Mythology (10 foreign language editions); How to Raise and Keep a Dragon (22 foreign language editions); and The Color and Texture Bible (50,000 foreign language copies sold within two months of publication). The outlook for 2008 remains rather uncertain, with the likelihood of continued caution prevailing among our publishing customers in North America and elsewhere. Quintet has not yet entirely recovered from the rude amputation of the Quintessence unit in mid-2006; nevertheless it emerged from an exciting and challenging 2007 with sales ahead of the previous year. The 500 Series, upon which much reliance was placed, has gone from strength to strength in English language markets, with some customers requiring re-supply as many as four times during the year. Publication in English of the sixth title was the signal for the floodgates of foreign language interest to open, and ten European customers were signed up by year-end, with initial orders from Holland alone exceeding first year sales achieved in the UK. Four new 500s are scheduled for publication in 2008, and the series looks certain to be a significant generator of profit for years to come. The rest of the Quintet program has been slower to right itself, and this has not been helped by numerous personnel changes throughout the year. Despite this, a 20-title frontlist for 2008, a mix of new books and those based on existing assets, represents the highest number since 2004, and provides a solid base from which to grow what is in many ways a brand new imprint still in the throes of establishing its identity. Feedback from customers has been positive, and there is optimism both in key markets and within the unit. After treading water in 2006, Qu:id's renewed focus on the 'three Cs' - concept, content, and co-edition - led to a healthy improvement in sales and profit. The new frontlist was well received, and early results from titles launched in the last quarter of 2007 are encouraging: Make 50 Wild & and Wacky Contraptions (published in association with The Smithsonian Institution in the US), and the lead humour title What Shat That? both performed strongly, the latter doing particularly well in the trendy US retail chain Urban Outfitters that some would say is Qu:id's natural habitat. This is Not a Book: Adventures in Popular Philosophy was also a hit, and additional volumes are planned in this line for 2008. In today's very competitive environment, the look and feel of a book is often key to its success. Qu:id continues to utilize the thriving creative community in Brighton by commissioning design and illustration from talented individuals seeking to support their wider artistic ambition; this enables it to extract both quality and value from its new title development process. Prospects for 2008 and beyond are good, with a healthy order book and some big titles in production, including a new series, and continuations of other established formats. The integration into the Qu:id worldview of Quarto's crack London-based foreign language sales team has proceeded seamlessly, and we are expecting to see very significant sales increases in these markets. Qu:id remains a small business unit, but with a growing ambition. It has carved a solid niche with its refreshing approach to established publishing categories, and seems set on a path of growth combined with strong bottom-line performance. In what was a very tough year for the promotional book sector, Quantum grew sales by 7% while profit remained flat. The unit's performance was severely impacted mid-year by the failure of a printer to keep to delivery agreements, leading to major disruption and some cancelled orders. Most of the sales growth came from English language reprints of the Cartographica line, offsetting further declines in Quantum's traditional business. The decision to invest in Cartographica was taken specifically to counter Quantum's over-reliance on the systemically weak promotional market, and this now looks like a wise move, as the disintegration of the sector continues apace. The latest victim is The Works Retail Ltd, the UK's largest value book retailer, which went into administration on January 31, 2008. Most of Quantum's UK business is transacted through wholesalers, so our direct exposure to this event is negligible, but it will undoubtedly have a ripple effect through the UK industry. All is not bleak, however: four new Cartographica titles are scheduled for delivery in 2008 and are eagerly awaited by their licensees; the order book is 30% ahead of where it was this time last year, and foreign language markets are holding up well. Quantum has a new publisher, with a new perspective, and she has set about redefining the unit's activities in the changed landscape of promotional publishing with vigour and determination. Illustrated children's imprint Q+ made great strides towards fulfilling its promise of last year. On the back of a program of innovative, high quality publishing, significant breakthroughs were made in the form of first-time deals with prestigious new customers, including Chronicle Books, National Geographic, and Random House. The strategy of producing titles in series to generate pull-through began to bear fruit as Scholastic followed up Ultimate Interactive Atlas with Ultimate Interactive Space Atlas. Barron's, another well-regarded US educational publisher, emerged as one of our most important customers, adding four titles in 2007 to the four they bought in 2006, the majority of which have already reprinted. New UK partners included Dorling Kindersley, Hodder, and The Natural History Museum, while Allen & Unwin and Walker Books joined the party in Australia. Sales in foreign language markets were, if anything, even more impressive: all new projects were auctioned, with some buyers fighting to acquire the title of their choice. Despite all this, the unit failed to meet its profit forecast in 2007, as a number of key frontlist titles missed their year-end delivery slots. It is hard to overstate the sense of disappointment this has caused. The outlook for 2008 is considerably rosier, however: the order book is already significantly ahead of 2007's year-end figure, and foreign sales are set to grow by over 50%. With a little more discipline, vigilance, and honest self-appraisal, the prospects for Q+ look brighter than they have for some time. Iqon Editions, Quarto's boutique co-edition unit specializing in accessible cultural reference, delivered Understanding Religions, the latest title in its bestselling . . . Isms series. This is proving a successful concept, with more than 400,000 copies sold to date of the first three titles, in over 20 language editions. The next title, Understanding Fashion, is due for publication in 2008 and is eagerly awaited by an already salivating public. RotoVision continued its upward trajectory with steady growth in 2007. Trade with existing US co-edition partners remained brisk, while the uncertainty surrounding the US economy did not prevent the establishment of new business relationships. Elsewhere, a strong year in established territories such as Netherlands, Italy, and Spain, where turnover more than doubled, was partially offset by Germany, where sales dipped as one-off backlist opportunities in 2006 were not repeated. Growth in Eastern Europe was steady rather than stellar, while sales in Japan and Korea, where domestic competition is tough, remained disappointingly flat. Despite this, an overall increase of 22% in foreign language sales is a very satisfactory result. One indicator of enduring appeal is the 44% increase in foreign co-edition reprints. Series such as 500 Hints, Tips and Techniques, Essential Design Handbooks and the flagship World's Top Photographers reprint repeatedly, while stand-alone title Designs of the Times, which published in 2005, is now translated into a dozen languages, and some customers are on their third printing. On the back of difficult trading conditions in the UK, RotoVision escaped relatively lightly. As a publisher of specialist professional books, it is less exposed to the vagaries of the UK book trade, and actually benefits from the continued onslaught on the trade from online retailers. Export sales were robust, and although the ambitious target wasn't quite reached, turnover increased by 19%. A policy of rigorous stock management is paying off, and an aggressive stock clearance that took place mid-year means the unit has a clean slate moving into 2008, which publisher April Sankey expects to be another year of solid growth. Marshall Editions' strategy is straightforward: to increase its output of high-quality reference books that customers will want to buy in English-speaking and foreign language markets. This was partially successful in 2007; frontlist revenues hit a six-year peak, with twenty new titles published - up from seventeen the previous year - and this helped to offset the fall in backlist and foreign language sales, declines arising largely from the age of some of the backlist titles. The frontlist, meanwhile, is more robust than at any time since Quarto acquired Marshall from administration, and will provide significant profit contribution in the medium term. New relationships were established during the year, and existing ones strengthened: our collaboration with National Geographic was further cemented by the publication of Encyclopedia of Animal Tracks, while the signing of new contracts with Harper Collins and Harry Potter's US publisher, Scholastic, emerged as key developments. We expect 2008 to be a challenging year, but we have it within our capabilities to overcome these headwinds, and to further build the Marshall brand and reputation for excellence. 2007 was quite a year for the small but talented team at The World of Fine Wine. Contributor Jamie Goode won the Glenfiddich Wine Writer of the Year Award for his work in the magazine. Tasting Panel member Andreas Larsson was named World's Best Sommelier at a ceremony in Spain. And The World of Fine Wine won the ArtVinum Media Award 2007 at the forum for European Wine Culture in Stuttgart. The award citation described the magazine as 'By far the best wine publication on the market.' In addition to a further four quarterly issues of the award-winning magazine, the WoFW team delivered the content of 1001 Wines You Must Taste Before You Die to Quintessence in record time. They will announce, during 2008, the launch of their first co-edition publishing initiative proper, a prestigious new series of regional guides to the world's finest wines. Shareholders can subscribe to The World of Fine Wine at half price by emailing the publisher, SaraB@finewinemag.com. Sydney-based Global Book Publishing turned in a superb performance under the stewardship of managing director Chryl Campbell. Sales were 16% ahead of the prior year. A significant contributor to the result is the continuing success of Biblica: The Bible Atlas. Since publication in 2006, it has been translated into twelve foreign languages (Dutch, French, German, Italian, Greek, Catalan, Russian, Norwegian, Hungarian, Czech, Polish and Japanese), and this success has opened doors to existing and future Global titles: all of Global's 2007 titles are sold in at least one foreign language, and 2008 projects are eliciting keen interest. Global sold and produced four new titles in 2007, expanding its English-language client base to include half a dozen new customers. The acquisition of The Anatomy Student's Self-Test Coloring Book by The Royal Society of Medicine Press and Palgrave Macmillan is a testament to the very high quality of Global's human anatomy illustrations, all of which were developed in-house. Following excellent initial sales of the coloring book, both these customers have ordered the updated and revised edition of Anatomica's Flash Cards for delivery in the first half of 2008. Global is starting 2008 with a record number of new titles and updated editions in the order book. New customers of note include National Geographic US, who, following extensive direct mail testing, committed to 60,000 copies of Edible, and Thames & Hudson, which will publish both China and The Middle East. The unit's key challenges for the year ahead are those associated with managing growth: maintaining its near-perfect record for on-time delivery, despite a much heavier production schedule, and consolidating its financial results despite considerable investment in new titles and an aging backlist. Another good year is anticipated. Regent Publishing Services, our Hong Kong based print production service, made very considerable sales advances in 2007 in an extremely price competitive environment. Most of the growth came from the United States and, for 2008, we are redoubling our efforts to penetrate the UK and continental European markets more effectively. Publishing Quayside Publishing Group, under the direction of Ken Fund, the core of Quarto's US publishing and distribution operations, had a very successful 2007. We began the year with four strategic goals: to review and develop a business plan for our Craft publishing; to improve and modernize the design of our Home Improvement titles; to arrest and reverse the poor performance at Fair Winds Press; and to locate a new facility for Quayside West. We achieved, or made significant progress towards achieving, all of these during the year. In August we acquired Minnesota neighbours MBI Publishing, which served the strategic imperative of providing entry into another tranche of enthusiast publishing categories. MBI's management team has worked hard to adopt the Quayside business model and excellent progress has been made towards full integration of the two businesses. As expected, the acquisition has thrown up issues of size and shape, and we continue to research warehouse and operational consolidation for the North American publishing businesses, with the goal of having a strategy in place by second quarter 2008, for implementation in early 2009. In our search to identify the correct sales and marketing resource for the combined business, we recently appointed Kevin Hamric, formerly of Taunton Press, as VP of sales and marketing. Our first sales meeting under his leadership included a searching examination of current accounts, publishing lists, discount schedules, marketing and publicity plans, together with numerous strategy sessions, all of which energized the sales team for 2008. After several years of robust frontlist growth, Rockport's 2007 list did not perform as strongly out of the gate as in previous seasons. This is partly the result of a deliberate change of tack: we have placed increased emphasis on producing evergreen titles that backlist strongly and sell in foreign language markets, and expect that this will more than make up for any frontlist shortfall. We have stepped up efforts to gain course adoptions and secondary reading list recommendations. We will build on our initial successes in these areas by creating an editorial and marketing strategy to optimize our penetration into academic markets, which will help in consolidating our status as publisher of choice for design professionals, both domestically and internationally. Efforts to attract well recognized and prolific authors - including Angela Cartwright, Laura McCabe, LK Ludwig, and Susan Stein - to our craft specialists Quarry Books and CPi Lifestyles were rewarded by many strong sellers in 2007, but overall we suffered somewhat from the lack of an outstanding, break-out title. Our books continue to be well received by the craft community, and a diverse backlist has enabled us to maintain a strong foothold in the category, but we remain faced with the challenge of growth on a playing field that is now more competitive than ever. 2007 also presented its fair share of problems in our existing distribution channels: strong sales into the Michaels chain early in the year were offset by sluggishness in the second half, as inventory built up in the stores. Hancock Fabrics, an important account for us in previous years, sought bankruptcy protection and reduced store counts. AC Moore changed distributors halfway through the year, and suspended ordering for a while. We will continue to take such challenges in our stride. Craft books aside, Quarry continues to build on core categories that have proved successful to date (pets, foods, artisan hobbies) and test new ones that seem likely to meet our aims. Our 101 Tricks for Dogs sold more than 40,000 copies in 10 months, and we are close to reaching our initial goal as a small, but strong and profitable, publisher of backlist. Fair Winds Press had a lacklustre year. The list has still not fully recovered from the success of its Low-Carb cooking series, and in the intervening years has been unable to replace this line of revenue with anything of similar magnitude. During 2007 we carried out a comprehensive strategic review of our publishing, identifying successful subject areas and rethinking the kind of books that will carry the program to higher profits without significantly increasing the number of titles published. We now believe we have charted the path to future success. Our new book concepts are broad reaching, have greater reference value, and offer consumers specific solutions that differentiate them from the competition, with authoritative, information-driven text backed up by exemplary design and high production values. First signs are that our new approach is working. Last fall we published Jonny Bowden's 150 Healthiest Foods on Earth, a book that exemplifies the new direction Fair Winds is taking. Its depth of content is convincing to potential consumers making a purchasing decision: no matter what page they flip to, they learn something surprising and useful. This density of information in a chunky package justifies the $25 price point in paperback, and with 20,000 copies through the register in 2007 it seems the public agrees. The 2008 Fair Winds program is off to a solid start. We have a full flight of 40-plus content-packed titles and believe we are positioned for healthy gains in 2008, and beyond. CPi Home Improvement did not escape the consequences of a continuing soft market in the home construction and building trades: unit sales numbers were off in almost every channel, and were especially hard hit in the Lowes and Home Depot chains which, together, are the major sales outlets for CPi's home improvement titles. There was some cause for optimism in the final quarter, however, and December buy-ins were strong enough partially to redeem an otherwise dismal year for revenue. We correctly predicted the popularity of flooring as a subject matter, and our publication of a flooring how-to book, as well as an inspirational title on flooring, gave us a market advantage over the competition. Other successes during the year included books on Sheds, Luxurious Living, and Custom Shelves & Built-ins. The newly branded John Deere line enjoyed a surprisingly good reception at Home Depot, while our Complete Guide to Home Repair and Complete Guide to Home Improvement fared well in all channels. The home improvement crunch that is hurting us is also hurting our competitors, who have retrenched significantly in the category, abandoning market share that we will be only too pleased to pick up. For 2008 we will update and revise our strong-selling backlist titles, and release new titles where we see strong marketplace support. In this respect, we are working with new branding partner, Quikrete, a manufacturer of proprietary concrete products. CPi Outdoor faces a number of tough decisions in 2008. The category remains severely challenged, with a weakening public appetite for traditional hunting and fishing titles, and sales to all major outdoor accounts showing year-on-year declines. We plan to curtail investment in new titles, while keeping proven backlist sellers up to date for the restricted market that we know exists, while at the same time exploring outdoor recreational subjects beyond the confines of hunting and fishing. The logic of this is reinforced by the sales success we had during the year with wild game and wild fish cookbooks, and the high pre-publication sell-in of our Orvis Birdwatching Guide, all of which gives us confidence that we may be able to evolve the program away from its current narrow preoccupations into a more general outdoor and recreational how-to list. Overall sales at MBI Distribution were flat, but this disguised a number of significant changes in the mix of customers. A huge increase in sales to Amazon.com, where sales have increased by 10% per year since 2005, offset declining trade sales and sales to Tractor Supply. Several distribution agreements came to an end during the year, and we will seek to replace this business as a priority, as we embark on a new initiative to market MBI Distribution Services to new publishing clients. Motorbooks finished the year strongly. The publishing program was 13% smaller than the prior year's and placed greater emphasis on 'Core Skill' titles - those applicable broadly, as opposed to focused on a specific marque or engine family - paid off with good initial sales for our Workshop series, and our Muscle Car and Motorcycle publishing strands performed dependably well. A line of narrative books, a fairly recent development for Motorbooks and an unusual one for a transport publisher, has worked selectively, with just four titles generating a half million dollars in net sales. Throughout the year our newly strengthened marketing team achieved widespread coverage of our books, not only in the enthusiast press, but also in mainstream outlets like Men's Journal, Rolling Stone, Playboy, New York Times, and LA Times, and got our authors on radio and TV. New narrative titles include The Chrome Cowgirl Guide to the Motorcycle Life, the female answer to the Biker's Handbook; and Riding on the Edge, a memoir of a former president of the Pagans, one of the more notorious outlaw biker clubs. The Custom Painting Idea Book, aimed at enthusiasts planning their next custom vehicle, is the first in a new series of aspirational titles designed to do for the gearhead what craft and home remodelling books do for a general audience. We also see a strong and largely untapped opportunity for foreign language editions of Motorbooks titles and, using Quarto's abundant experience, look forward to exploiting this profitably over the coming years. Voyageur Press's surprise bestseller in 2007 was How to Shovel Manure, and Other Life Lessons for the Country Woman, while its top-selling giftbook was The Art of the Snowflake, which sold 25,278 copies. In between times it also launched a new series of animal husbandry books in conjunction with the Future Farmers of America group, capturing the category from the competition in the 750+ store Tractor Supply Co, one of the mid-West's biggest retail chains, and appointed a publisher to develop a new regional sports and recreation imprint with plans to publish 16 titles annually starting in 2009. Zenith Press, which has a number of well-established and successful series in the military history and aviation books categories, had another year of growth. A major attraction of this kind of publishing is that sales into specialist channels of distribution tend to be non-returnable, providing steady and profitable business, although this often goes hand in hand with low retail prices. Efforts are being made across the list to increase retail prices, and Zenith's first $50 gift book, on the Normandy campaign, is scheduled for Christmas 2008. A strong program of narrative frontlist titles got off to an excellent start at launch last year: several of these should backlist in hardcover and most will be suitable for softcover reissue in the future. A particular highlight of 2008's program is the publication of a tie-in book for the Hell's Highway video game, which is budgeted to sell 2m copies at a MRSP of $60. This is a new venture and we are unable to predict what proportion of game owners will buy the companion book, but it is clearly an exciting prospect that has the potential to influence our performance significantly. We already have the tie-in book for the next game in the series - Bastogne - under contract. Book Sales continued under the watchful stewardship of Mel Shapiro and, like clockwork, turned in a reliable performance in spite of considerable volatility in the promotional book market. With its very solid sales in the mature art instruction area, Walter Foster has struggled to achieve comparable strengths in other areas. There were sales gains in 2007, but they were not reflected on the bottom line, and call for a fundamental re-evaluation of the current publishing strategy, which is now being undertaken. JR Books, our newest UK-based venture, had an auspicious first year: its debut list, launched in late 2007, beat its sales budget by 100%. Although the short lead-time between the launch and Christmas meant that many titles missed the main bookstore promotions, sales of Matthew Parris' Mission Accomplished and Alan Coren's posthumous 69 for 1 far exceeded expectations, while Les Dawson's Secret Notebooks ended up on Waterstones' bestseller list and Dr Pam's Fabulous Foreplay made it on to Amazon's sex bestsellers. Of course, this sort of profile can be achieved by lavish spending on promotions, Christmas catalogues, and author launches, but the Quarto way relies more on hard work, clever interventions, and judicious use of contacts in the media, with the minimum of expenditure. We achieved very wide review coverage of our new title output, and had our authors popping up on key radio and television programmes throughout the autumn. We were also able to arrange a number of high-profile serializations, including a six-part dramatization of Frederic Raphael's Fame and Fortune on BBC Radio 4. The trade press was highly supportive, not only heralding the new company, but running news stories on acquisitions and events. After such an excellent start, the pressure is on to deliver an equally stunning second year: we are planning to publish twice as many new titles in 2008, as well as reissue our launch list in paperback, so for now we are growing fast and full of optimism for the future. Aurum Press started the year on a wave of optimism following an exceptional 2006, although our budget for 2007 did reflect concern that consumer spending might dip in the course of the year. What we were absolutely not prepared for was the unprecedented level of returns in the first 6 months. It is one of the idiocies of the book trade that the more you sell, the more you get back, even when sales out of the stores are increasing. Thus we paid the price in the first half of 2007 for our sales success in late 2006. Our key 2007 Christmas titles - biographies of Pink Floyd and Alice Cooper, a facsimile of the 1937 Oor Wullie Annual, and The Rules of Golf - sold well across the board, and we anticipate lower returns in 2008, as we deliberately restricted supply towards the end of the year to let stock in the stores sell through. Throughout the year, sales continued to drift from the High Street to supermarkets and online, in particular to Amazon. Aurum is in a good position to benefit from this shift. The joint venture with Jacqui Small is now 5 years old and in that time we have built up a considerable image archive. As well as seeking to reuse these images in spin-off titles, we have entered into an agreement with TIA Digital to market them on a worldwide basis for use other than in books. We believe this could create a useful new income stream. Also in the UK, Image Factory, which supplies publishing and market support services from its Chippenham base, doubled its profit contribution after installing a new 10 foot wide digital printer, and associated equipment, at the end of 2006. This investment has paid off, and complements the factory's silk screen capabilities. We have ordered a larger machine, which will be delivered by the end of the first quarter of 2008. Lifetime Distributors, Australia's leading display marketer of books, prospered well in Australia's booming economy, brushing off the effect of three successive interest rate rises and continued increases in both fuel and shipping costs. Mark Bonello and his team grew sales by 22% and saw pre-tax profits nearly double. A key achievement during the year was the satisfactory resolution of a longstanding issue through the transfer of ownership of an underperforming master franchise. The energy with which the new owner set about redressing the situation in this master franchise was a major driver of performance throughout the second half of the year. 2007 also saw the business quietly re-brand itself, and during 2008 it will undertake a major marketing initiative to increase the Lifetime franchising profile, and heighten public awareness of the company. This will focus primarily on recruiting new franchisees and sub-franchisees in both the Australian and New Zealand markets. Recorded sales of 4.1 million units from a combined Australia and New Zealand population of just over 25 million makes Lifetime the largest direct seller of products per capita in the world. The company is in robust good health and has exciting and ambitious plans for the future. Premier Books, the largest, and only national, display marketer of books in New Zealand, produced a very solid result for the year. After years of strong growth, during which Premier has entrenched itself throughout the country, we shall now be focusing greater attention on better product selection, and operational improvements, as we operate in an increasingly competitive environment. The most disappointing news on the publishing front, comes from our two art print publishing units, APG in the US and Artworks, in Australia. After struggling to deal with major industry changes for several years, but still managing to produce profit and a positive cash flow, both units fell into loss. Overall, they still contributed cash, but they are now retooling their approaches. APG is considering moving into more upmarket publishing, and Artworks has expanded its third-party design business. Evidence suggests that the depredations of the last several years, which involved digital printing of imagery, the importation of inexpensive framed canvas look-alikes from China, and an affluent customer base that was looking for something original, have now largely run their course. This is not to say that the situation has reverted to what it was before, but the indications are that these businesses can succeed, if they adapt. CONSOLIDATED INCOME STATEMENT (unaudited) year ended December 31, 2007 Note 2007 2006 £000 £000 Continuing operations Revenue 1 100,107 93,613 Cost of sales (62,842) (58,926) Gross profit 37,265 34,687 Other operating income 321 281 Distribution costs (3,778) (3,586) -------- -------- Administrative expenses before amortization of intangibles and non-recurring items (23,248) (21,825) Amortization of intangibles (1,312) (1,387) Non-recurring items Bad debt - (1,238) Excess recovery of aborted acquisition costs 370 - -------- -------- Total administrative expenses (24,190) (24,450) -------- -------- Profit from operations before amortization of intangibles and non-recurring items 10,560 9,557 -------- -------- Operating profit 1 9,618 6,932 Finance income 412 298 Finance costs (3,321) (2,593) Profit before tax 6,709 4,637 Tax (1,697) (1,202) Profit for the year 5,012 3,435 Attributable to: Equity holders of the parent 4,243 2,800 Minority interest 769 635 5,012 3,435 Earnings per share From continuing operations Basic 2 21.6p 14.3p Diluted 2 21.1p 13.9p CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET (unaudited) at year ended December 31, 2007 2007 2006 £000 £000 Non-current assets Goodwill 18,307 9,710 Other intangible assets 4,194 2,987 Property, plant and equipment 7,445 7,501 Deferred tax assets 763 198 Total non-current assets 30,709 20,396 Current assets Intangible assets: Pre-publication costs 25,079 20,919 Inventories 15,696 13,948 Tax receivable - 178 Trade and other receivables 32,285 27,022 Cash and cash equivalents 17,577 13,929 Total current assets 90,637 75,996 Total assets 121,346 96,392 Current liabilities Short term borrowings (2,760) (17,800) Trade and other payables (32,572) (25,981) Tax payable (1,547) (1,437) Total current liabilities (36,879) (45,218) Non-current liabilities Medium and long term borrowings (58,190) (27,121) Deferred tax liabilities (3,273) (4,404) Derivative financial instruments (1,110) - Other payables (29) (21) Total non-current liabilities (62,602) (31,546) Total liabilities (99,481) (76,764) Net assets 21,865 19,628 Equity Share capital 1,162 1,162 Paid in surplus 21,768 21,740 Retained deficit and other reserves (5,025) (6,951) Equity attributable to equity holders of the parent 17,905 15,951 Minority interest 3,960 3,677 Total equity 21,865 19,628 CONSOLIDATED CASH FLOW STATEMENT (unaudited) year ended December 31, 2007 2007 2006 £000 £000 Profit for the year 5,012 3,435 Adjustments for: Net finance costs 2,909 2,295 Depreciation of property, plant and equipment 1,038 959 Tax expense 1,697 1,202 Amortization of intangible assets 1,312 1,387 Amortization of pre-publication costs 8,416 7,461 Movement in fair value of derivatives - (254) Equity settled share - based payment expense 5 7 Loss (gain) on disposal of property, plant and equipment 22 (87) Operating cash flows before movements in working capital 20,411 16,405 Decrease (increase) in inventories 1,527 (1,307) Increase in receivables (1,674) (672) Increase (decrease) in payables 1,384 (267) Cash generated by operations 21,648 14,159 Income taxes paid (798) (611) Net cash from operating activities 20,850 13,548 Investing activities Interest received 412 298 Proceeds on disposal of property, plant and equipment 119 933 Investment in pre-publication costs (10,481) (8,444) Purchases of property, plant and equipment (688) (864) Acquisition of subsidiaries (17,941) (89) Net cash used in investing activities (28,579) (8,166) Financing activities Dividends paid (1,355) (1,291) Interest payments (3,005) (2,797) Proceeds on issue of share capital 56 56 New bank loans raised 32,189 583 Repayment of bank loans (15,916) - Dividends paid to minority interest (226) (244) Net cash from (used in) financing activities 11,743 (3,693) Net increase in cash and cash equivalents 4,014 1,689 Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year 12,110 11,899 Foreign currency exchange differences on cash and cash equivalents (15) (1,478) Cash and cash equivalents at end of year 16,109 12,110 NOTES (unaudited) 1. Segmented analysis Business segments Co-edition Co-edition Publishing Publishing Total Total Publishing Publishing 2007 2006 2007 2006 2007 2006 £000 £000 £000 £000 £000 £000 Revenue Total sales 40,287 40,307 61,732 55,210 102,019 95,517 Inter-segment revenue (1,907) (1,900) (5) (4) (1,912) (1,904) External sales 38,380 38,407 61,727 55,206 100,107 93,613 Segment result before amortization of intangibles and non-recurring costs 5,215 5,277 6,435 5,245 11,650 10,522 Amortization of intangibles (12) (12) (1,300) (1,375) (1,312) (1,387) Bad debts - (1,085) - (153) - (1,238) Segment result 5,203 4,180 5,135 3,717 10,338 7,897 Excess recovery of aborted acquisition costs 370 - Unallocated corporate expenses (1,090) (965) Profit from operations 9,618 6,932 Investment income 412 298 Finance costs (3,321) (2,593) Profit before tax 6,709 4,637 Tax (1,697) (1,202) Profit after tax 5,012 3,435 Geographical Segments Revenue Revenue 2007 2006 £000 £000 United Kingdom 16,385 16,668 United States of America 48,750 43,070 Australia and the Far East 19,605 18,384 Europe 11,266 11,860 Rest of the World 4,101 3,631 100,107 93,613 NOTES (unaudited)(continued) 2. Earnings per share 2007 2006 £000 £000 Earnings for the purposes of basic earnings per share, being net profit attributable to equity holders of the parent 4,243 2,800 Effect of dilutive potential ordinary shares: Interest on loan notes (net of tax) 26 45 Earnings for the purposes of diluted earnings per share 4,269 2,845 Number Number Number of shares Weighted average number of ordinary shares for the purposes of basic earnings per share 19,643,747 19,563,900 Effect of dilutive potential ordinary shares: Share options 55,643 104,651 Dilutive loan note 537,144 855,015 Weighted average number of ordinary shares for the purposes of diluted earnings per share 20,236,534 20,523,566 2007 2006 pence pence Basic 21.6 14.3 Diluted 21.1 13.9 Adjusted Earnings Earnings for the purposes of basic earnings per share, being net 4,243 2,800 profit attributable to equity holders of the parent Amortization of intangibles (net of tax and minority interest) 905 962 Bad debt (net of tax and minority interest) - 818 Excess recovery of aborted acquisition costs (net of tax) (242) - Earnings for the purposes of adjusted earnings per share 4,906 4,580 Effect of dilutive potential ordinary shares: Interest on loan notes (net of tax) 26 45 Earnings for the purposes of diluted earnings per share 4,932 4,625 2007 2006 pence pence Basic 25.0 23.4 Diluted 24.4 22.5 NOTES (unaudited)(continued) 3. Dividends 2007 2006 £000 £000 Amounts recognised as distributions to equity holders in the period: Interim dividend for the year ended December 31, 2007 of 3.15p (2006: 3.0p) per share 619 587 Final dividend for the year ended December 31, 2006 of 3.75p (2005: 3.6p) per share 736 704 1,355 1,291 Proposed final dividend for the year ended December 31, 2007 of 4.0p (2006: 3.75p) per share 787 736 787 736 4. Consolidated statement of recognised income and expense 2007 2006 £000 £000 Exchange differences on translation of foreign operations 116 (1,222) Change in the fair value of cash flow hedges (1,110) - Net expense recognised directly in equity (994) (1,222) Profit for the year 5,012 3,435 Total recognised income and expense for the year 4,018 2,213 Attributable to: Equity holders of the parent 3,249 1,578 Minority interest 769 635 4,018 2,213 NOTES (unaudited) (continued) 5. Reconciliation of figures included in the Chairman's Letter 2007 2006 £000 £000 Profit before tax, before amortization of intangibles 7,651 7,262 and non-recurring items Amortization of intangibles (1,312) (1,387) Non-recurring items 370 (1,238) Profit before tax 6,709 4,637 EBITDA Profit before tax, before amortization of intangibles 7,651 7,262 and non-recurring items Net interest 2,909 2,295 Depreciation 1,038 959 Amortization of pre-publication costs 8,416 7,461 EBITDA, before non-recurring items 20,014 17,977 Net debt Medium and long term borrowings 58,190 27,121 Short term borrowings 2,760 17,800 Cash and cash equivalents (17,577) (13,929) 43,373 30,992 6. The financial information set out in the announcement does not constitute the company's statutory accounts for the year ended December 31, 2007 or 2006, prepared in accordance with the Companies Act 1985 as applicable to oversea companies. The financial information for the year ended December 31, 2006 is derived from the statutory accounts for that year, which have been delivered to the Registrar of Companies. The auditors reported on those accounts and their report was unqualified. The statutory accounts for the year ended December 31, 2007 will be finalised on the basis of the financial information presented by the Directors in this preliminary announcement and will be delivered to the Registrar of Companies following the Annual Meeting. The financial information contained within this Preliminary Announcement was approved by the Board on February 19, 2008. 7. The accounting policies adopted for use in the preparation of the 2007 Preliminary Results and of the 2007 Annual Financial Statements were consistent with those used in the preparation of the 2006 Annual Financial Statements. 8. The Annual Report will be sent out to shareholders in due course. Additional copies can be obtained from the Finance Director, The Quarto Group, Inc., 226 City Road, London EC1V 2TT. Tel: 020 7700 9000 (email: mickm@quarto.com). -------------------------- * Adjusted operating profit is profit before amortization of non-current intangibles and non-recurring items. Underlying numbers illustrate business performance excluding currency impact, amortization of intangibles, and non-recurring items, and are produced to give readers greater transparency. A reconciliation to the statutory results appears in Note 5. This information is provided by RNS The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
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